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Mozilla Removes 23 Firefox Add-Ons That Snooped On Users (bleepingcomputer.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Mozilla has removed 23 Firefox add-ons from its add-on store that snooped on users and sent data to remote servers, a Mozilla engineer told Bleeping Computer Friday. The list of blocked add-ons includes "Web Security," a security-centric Firefox add-on with over 220,000 users, which was at the center of a controversy this week after it was caught sending users' browsing histories to a server located in Germany. "The mentioned add-on has been taken down, together with others after I conducted a thorough audit of [the] add-ons," Rob Wu, a Mozilla Browser Engineer and Add-on review, told Bleeping Computer via email. "These add-ons are no longer available at AMO and [have been] disabled in the browsers of users who installed them," Wu said.

4 of 79 comments (clear)

  1. Hey lets remove the old addons. by DarkRookie · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Cuz, you know, the new stuff is definitely secure and this is just an illusion,

    --
    The millennial that doesn't like most of the stuff designed for millennials.
    1. Re:Hey lets remove the old addons. by slack_justyb · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Cuz, you know, the new stuff is definitely secure and this is just an illusion,

      The old system was removed because:

      One, the old system no one wanted to maintain it. Hard to keep a system secure when literally zero people want to work on it, Palemoon has some of the relics from the old system which means a lot of your addons should work there, but be warned that even they haven't kept 100% the old ways because...

      Two, the old system sucked really bad. The old addon system is crap because it required way more tightly coupled pieces then should ever be needed. Yes, it was bad code, that should be said, Mozilla in the early days shipped bad code. By the time FF24 ESR came around, folks saw it as a good time to start breaking away from the old bad code because...

      Three, you couldn't please everyone and new features took forever. All that super tightly coupled code meant that as soon as you changed that over there, person C's addon would break, fix it, and now person R over there has a broken issue related to feature ABC, fix that an now person Q is complaining about devs breaking feature XYZ. This was literally the norm with addons all of the time Bad code meant that the entire base was fragile and making sure addons worked between versions was becoming a nightmare, not only for FF devs but also for addon devs. Addon devs would just ask FF devs to just fix things and that led to...

      Four, at some point the FF devs said screw fixing this crap. Palemoon devs I guess are more apt to fix old code than the FF devs were, but basically the FF devs looked at the task at hand and just said screw it. With no one else wanting to jump on board, they began putting together what would become the next version of FF.

      Now here's the thing. These plugins were sipping data under the old system and they went undetected because the FF devs are busy trying to fix ABC that multitab dev over there is crying about. Now that the FF devs don't have to worry about that crap, yeah, they've got more time to carefully look at addons to see what's going on within. Addon security is indeed there, but only to a point. Addons aren't going to start grabbing files outside the sandbox and sending them to remote host, at least as far as anyone knows at the moment but bugs happen all the time. But all addons, even the old system, allowed your current URL request to be sent to remote host. If you use Palemoon, Chrome, Edge, or whatever, pretty much all addon systems allow to some degree the ability to ship your current URL to the addon for additional processing. The only way they can be made secure is to have eyeballs on the addons or if you just don't use addons at all, but you will not ever have an addon system that doesn't give the URL to the addon and trust them to not be malicious with it, unless you/yourself write said system. At some point, the end user needs to educate themselves about what the heck they're doing on their system. All addon systems are leaks of your data within your browser's sandbox. Using addons opens you up to a lot. If that's not kosher with you, then you ought not to use addons.

  2. List by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 5, Informative

    read TFA for methods and BMO link.

    Popup-Blocker
    Facebook Bookmark Manager
    Facebook Video Downloader
    YouTube MP3 Converter & Download
    Simply Search
    Smarttube - Extreme
    Self Destroying Cookies
    Popup Blocker Pro
    YouTube - Adblock
    Auto Destroy Cookies
    Amazon Quick Search
    YouTube Adblocker
    Video Downloader
    Google NoTrack
    Quick AMZ

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  3. Is one of the addons Pocket? by xack · · Score: 4, Interesting

    pocket, amazon and systemd, ruining your linuxperience.