Thank You.

I ll do it.

Regards
________________________________
Von: Bret Busby <b...@busby.net>
Gesendet: Montag, 21. November 2022 07:43
An: debian-user@lists.debian.org <debian-user@lists.debian.org>
Betreff: Re: FIREFOX is killing the whole PC PART II

On 21/11/2022 14:56, Gareth Evans wrote:
> On Sun 20 Nov 2022, at 10:53, Schwibinger Michael <h...@hotmail.com> wrote:
>> Hello
>> and thank You.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Thank you, this did help.
>
>> Two Questions more.
>
>> How can I find by terminal all dirt which is produced by browsers (Chrome, 
>> Firefox, Midori ...)?
>> I did try something like cache, but there were no new files.
>
> I think it would be easier to clear the cache and other data (possibly 
> including history if you wish) automatically when the browsers close.  There 
> are usually settings available to do that.
>
> See below.
>
>> How can I tell the browser (Firefox, Chrome and so on): Do not save any 
>> information.
>> Example:
>> I do open www.hotmail.de<http://www.hotmail.de>, sending Emails, and close 
>> hotmail.
>> No there should be no information left on the pc abour hotmail. Only the 
>> bookmark www.hotmail.de<http://www.hotmail.de>.
>
> If you mean an actual bookmark, clearing the history will not remove this.
>
> For Firefox:
>
> Settings > Privacy and Security
>
> - Delete cookies and site data when Firefox is closed
>
> - History
> -- Clear history when Firefox closes [Settings...]
>
> There are options for what to clear if you click the "settings" button, such 
> as
>
> - browsing history
> - cookies
> - cache
>
> So there seem to be two ways to clear cookies and site data when closing 
> Firefox, but I'm not sure if the options under History > Settings include all 
> the "site data" removed by the other setting.
>
> Best wishes,
> Gareth
>
>
>
>>
>>
>> Thank you.
>>
>>
>> Reards,
>> Sophie
>>
>>
>>
>> *Von:* Gareth Evans <donots...@fastmail.fm>
>> *Gesendet:* Samstag, 19. November 2022 14:12
>> *An:* debian-user@lists.debian.org <debian-user@lists.debian.org>
>> *Betreff:* Re: FIREFOX is killing the whole PC
>>
>> On Sat 19 Nov 2022, at 13:14, DdB <debianl...@potentially-spam.de-bruyn.de> 
>> wrote:
>>> Am 19.11.2022 um 10:34 schrieb Schwibinger Michael:
>>>> Hello
>>>>
>>>> Any idea?
>>>>
>>>> What did happen?
>>>> FF did open a page with bad PC,
>>>> so it needs 5 minutes to open it.
>>>> We killed the tab.
>>>> When we now try to open FF
>>>> whole PC is blocked.
>>>> How can we clean FF
>>>> because bad page is in it.
>>>>
>>>> Regards
>>>> Sophie
>>>>
>>
>>> Did you try to start it from the commandline with the option safe-mode?
>>>
>>> firefox --safe-mode
>>
>> If the idea is to prevent previous tabs from opening on startup, that only 
>> works for me if firefox is already running when I run
>>
>> firefox --safe-mode
>>
>> ...which may not be possible for Sophie.
>>
>> Removing the line:
>>
>> user_pref("browser.startup.page", 3);
>>
>> from
>>
>> /home/username/.mozilla/firefox/XXX.default-esr/prefs.js
>>
>> has the desired effect (where "XXX" is the appropriate string of letters and 
>> numbers).
>>
>> There may be more than one such profile directory, in which case, if other 
>> users don't rely on tabs being restored, then remove that line from all the
>>
>> XXX.whatever/prefs.js
>>
>> files you can find.
>>
>> It may also be necessary to add the line
>>
>> user_pref("browser.sessionstore.resume_from_crash", false);
>>
>> I don't know if the order of lines matters.  In my prefs.js, this appears in 
>> the sequence
>>
>> user_pref("browser.search.region", "GB");
>> user_pref("browser.search.widget.inNavBar", true);
>> user_pref("browser.sessionstore.resume_from_crash", false);
>>
>> when added from about:config, but the 2nd line is non-default as well as the 
>> 3rd, and these are only present if added manually or set in settings or 
>> about:config, as appropriate.
>>
>> Hope that helps
>> Gareth
>>
>>
>>
>


You may also want to, in the context of your problem and what you seek, to
1.
(1) set Settings -> Privacy and Security -> Browser Privacy to Strict or
Custom, and
(2) view and consider the Cookies and Site Data settings, and,
(3) the History settings there, and,
(4) in Security, make sure that each of
Block dangerous and deceptive content
Block dangerous downloads
Warn you about unwanted and uncommon software,
is selected

and
2. In Tools -> Add-ons and Themes, search for, and install Bluhell
Firewall. If I find a URL to be blocked by that, if, and, only if, I
sufficiently trust the URL, I then open the URL in the Pale Moon web
browser, where I have, amongst other things, an ad-blocker installed.


..
Bret Busby
Armadale
West Australia
(UTC+0800)
..............

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