Alex Nedelcu on Nostr: #Chrome has always been ahead in terms of security. E.g., t took a really long time ...
#Chrome has always been ahead in terms of security. E.g., t took a really long time for Firefox to implement a permissions model for extensions, and then to give the ability to disallow some extensions in Private Mode. And right now, it doesn't have “click to enable” on extensions.
I'm a minimalist, but even I use problematic extensions, like LanguageTool (alternative to Grammarly). And if you're security conscious, you can't allow such extensions to access your security-sensitive services.
Published at
2023-08-23 07:30:15Event JSON
{
"id": "5e06a4959251fbd085eda3f1e214b0e74c002a73657354fb9f5d13c51760111f",
"pubkey": "2464a99bb3a2cface2d500032721fbdb4f036b4c92624d2039a11cc2d6a744a4",
"created_at": 1692775815,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
"e",
"265b6b28b10933f4da869e0c34ed2d47e6dae2c83422f6e8e5b9ce92594ee0f9",
"wss://relay.mostr.pub",
"reply"
],
[
"t",
"chrome"
],
[
"proxy",
"https://social.alexn.org/users/alexelcu/statuses/110937755860075140",
"activitypub"
]
],
"content": "#Chrome has always been ahead in terms of security. E.g., t took a really long time for Firefox to implement a permissions model for extensions, and then to give the ability to disallow some extensions in Private Mode. And right now, it doesn't have “click to enable” on extensions.\n\nI'm a minimalist, but even I use problematic extensions, like LanguageTool (alternative to Grammarly). And if you're security conscious, you can't allow such extensions to access your security-sensitive services.",
"sig": "f5e851b3022975a065a98ddc0ecfb271908c8b4526f10a1c0d51c2c40a23cfb114f516b1bc3994d426a66c46921f954977e5c9baf649b17a09431865d247eabb"
}