Firefox 44 Arrives With Push Notifications (mozilla.org)
An anonymous reader writes: Mozilla today launched Firefox 44 for Windows, Mac, Linux, and Android. Notable additions to the browser include push notifications, the removal of RC4 encryption, and new powerful developer tools. Mozilla made three promises for push notifications: "1. To prevent cross-site correlations, every website receives a different, anonymous Web Push identifier for your browser. 2. To thwart eavesdropping, payloads are encrypted to a public / private keypair held only by your browser. 3. Firefox only connects to the Push Service if you have an active Web Push subscription. This could be to a website, or to a browser feature like Firefox Hello or Firefox Sync." Here are the full changelogs: Desktop and Android.
Who has a list of which configuration options I need to go into about:config and disable this time?
"BSD: Free as in speech. Linux: Free as in beer. Windows 10: Free as in herpes." --Man On Pink Corner in #52607549.
This version is also the first to require signed extensions with no way to:
1) Disable the signature check at all
2) Use any signature other than Mozilla's
3) Install a extension built and packaged by your distribution repository (unless Mozilla signs each build)
4) Forcefully install a extension that you built yourself
I don't understand why Mozilla gets away with this type of hidden DRM. At least in Secure Boot you could enroll your own signatures.
Here, the only option you have is to switch to an unbranded fork of Firefox.
A website registers a Service Worker with the browser. Service Workers are small JavaScript programs with super powers like intercepting network requests or running even when their parent website is closed.
What could possibly go wrong?
Who has a list of which configuration options I need to go into about:config and disable this time?
You must be an old timer!
Programs are configurable! Just go through all the apps and programs that you use on a daily basis and change whatever you want to make the system work to your liking.
All these features are easy to change, and learning a mere handful of methods will get you anywhere you want to go.
1) Go to about.config, click on the "I understand", type in "this.obscure.value", double click it to change value. The "this.obscure.value" is named in a transparent, easily understandable way such as "browser.cache.disk.smart_size.enabled". This enables the "smart size" feature of the caching system. It's obvious what it does, because it's name says it all.
2) Go to start->run->regedit, navigate to "this obscure value", type in "add new value" in DWORD format and set it's value to 1. For instance, to disable the new volume control and go back to the old style, just navigate to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion, create a new key MTCUVC, create a new DWORD EnableMtcUvc, and set its value to 0.
Only old folks think that's not simple, and I don't for the life of me know why!
3) Pick a random number, put "KB" in front of it, and do what's described there. For example, KB3035583 tells you how Microsoft has helpfully introduced "additional capabilities for Windows Update notifications when new updates are available to the user". It's just telling you how Windows 10 is now available. If you want to customize this behaviour, you can use task manager to stop the GWX.exe process. Or, you can go to programs and then click or tap on View installed updates, then scroll down until you see the KB3035583 update, select it, press "uninstall", and then confirm that you want to uninstall it.
Nothing could be simpler, I just *don't get* where these old folks are coming from!
4) Changing things in linux it's even easier! Just go to /etc as root and vi "some-random-file", and change the configuration manually. It's easy to do, because all the configuration files are in one place! For example, remote disks are called "shares", and the process that manages this is called samba, and the file to edit is thus /etc/samba/smb.conf.
What could be easier? The .conf ending lets you know that it's a configuration file!
If you don't know how to use vi, simply type "man vi" and you'll find all the information you need!
Really, I don't understand why old folks don't understand these things - everything is so simple!
And will be used for "One Weird Trick to a Titanic Penis" and "Firefox has detected a CRITICAL security problem. Click on _this link_ to eliminate the malware from your system"
I'm confused. We are delaying the removal of this preference to Firefox 46
RSS is dying because sites don't like it. People use it as a shortcut to see whether anything on their list of favorite blogs is worth navigating to the site to read. If not, then they won't visit the site, taking page hits (and ad revenue) from the site. I love RSS, but it seems like sites are dropping support for it left and right.
"Can't you see that everyone is buying station wagons?"
Give Pottering a week and we'll have some spaghetti code that does the same thing in kernel.
Only the State obtains its revenue by coercion. - Murray Rothbard
So based on last month's stats, Firefox is down to about 7% of the browser market. That's across all versions, on all desktop and mobile (where Firefox for Android has a massive 0.05% of the market) platforms.
At this point, Firefox as a whole is nearly below iOS Safari 9.2, IE 11, and UC Browser for Android. It almost has fewer users than Opera Mini, even! Hell, even Chrome 46 still has almost as many users as Firefox has in total, and Chrome is up to version 48 now!
It's now clear that Firefox 44 introduces a lot of shit that users just don't want, and there's a lot more dumb shit in the pipeline, too.
Based on this, I'm going to make a prediction: Firefox will be at or under 2% of the market by the end of 2016.
So many of Firefox's changes only serve to drive users away to other browsers, and I don't see anything suggesting that they'll start listening to their few remaining users any time soon. Rust and Servo are total dead ends at this point, so we can't count on them to save Firefox.
Once Firefox hits such a low single-digit share of the market, it's likely that Mozilla will be considered completely irrelevant. This is bad for the web, of course, since it cements the WebKit/Blink monoculture.
Web push is already easily handled through WebSockets. I wrote a couple applications that are able to handle hundreds of random notifications per second coming from a server. Works with Chrome, Firefox and even IE. Older versions of IE require a polyfill but even that works great.
That was the turning point of my life--I went from negative zero to positive zero.
Yet, mind bogglingly enough it is still way simpler than trying to fix windows registry. Mind you fuck up about:config and the browser stops working, Windows registry fucks itself up and you computer stops working. Want to keep a computer working, always dual boot and that way you can boot to Linux to fix your gaming and browsing machine. I have managed to keep windows 7 going since getting this computer without a reinstall by that very method. Damn being able to edit a text file makes like so much easier when it comes to fixing a broken OS or broken program. Having to reinstall a program or and entire OS and every program you have because you couldn't edit a text file is fucking nuts. One five minute edit versus hours and hours of reinstall, oh, yeah that edit is so very, very hard.
Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen