Updated: Just use qutebrowser (and disable javascript). The web is done for.
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Save haasn/69e19fc2fe0e25f3cff5 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
@yb66 if you re-read my comment you will find the reasoning for not using non-standard configurations is right there: because you are easier to track (and that defeats the implicit goal of most tweaks in this gist, see all the author's remarks about "avoiding fingerprinting" and "user privacy"). See e.g. https://panopticlick.eff.org/.
About my point about the random gist about cryptographic "suggestions": I'm sorry if I wasn't clear enough. Let me rephrase: you should never trust opinions about how to do or not do cryptography from sources that the cryptographic community does not consider to be respectable. I have nothing against the author of this gist but, as I stated, it does not come even close to clearing that bar. (note that a simple way for the author to clear that bar would be to provide references to respectable sources as to why he's changing cryptographic settings - something that is conspicuously missing from the gist)
I hope my comment is clearer now.
Webshitters are the modern-day Java corporate drones from the 00s.
Also Brendan Eich is a cunt.
Palemoon is the closest fork of Firefox with still some sanity in it.
Palemoon developers thinks he's in a position to dictate what extensions users can or cannot install, which makes his browser automatically unfit for purpose.
It is a shame this was taken down by the author. It lives on in the "revisions" tab regardless for those that wish to still use it.
I suggest people wanting to block telemetry and data collection use my fork. I pared it down so hopefully it is a good compromise between keeping browsing usable and privacy, and I hope to keep it maintained.
👍 @MrYar
Setting
security.OCSP.require
totrue
breaks a lot of functionality, particularly around anything related to Google, in case anyone was having trouble after applying some of these settings