How to use Firefox in Private mode with only *some* add-ons?











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On Chrome browser, you can select which extensions are active in private mode (incognito). How to do the same in Firefox please? (By default Firefox allows all add-ons in Private mode).










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  • I don't think you can. I can't see an open bug for it either.
    – stuartd
    Nov 13 at 22:44















up vote
2
down vote

favorite












On Chrome browser, you can select which extensions are active in private mode (incognito). How to do the same in Firefox please? (By default Firefox allows all add-ons in Private mode).










share|improve this question









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get_going is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • I don't think you can. I can't see an open bug for it either.
    – stuartd
    Nov 13 at 22:44













up vote
2
down vote

favorite









up vote
2
down vote

favorite











On Chrome browser, you can select which extensions are active in private mode (incognito). How to do the same in Firefox please? (By default Firefox allows all add-ons in Private mode).










share|improve this question









New contributor




get_going is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











On Chrome browser, you can select which extensions are active in private mode (incognito). How to do the same in Firefox please? (By default Firefox allows all add-ons in Private mode).







google-chrome firefox google-chrome-extensions firefox-extensions






share|improve this question









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get_going is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









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share|improve this question




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edited Nov 14 at 13:25









fixer1234

17.2k144280




17.2k144280






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asked Nov 13 at 4:54









get_going

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255




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get_going is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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get_going is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






get_going is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












  • I don't think you can. I can't see an open bug for it either.
    – stuartd
    Nov 13 at 22:44


















  • I don't think you can. I can't see an open bug for it either.
    – stuartd
    Nov 13 at 22:44
















I don't think you can. I can't see an open bug for it either.
– stuartd
Nov 13 at 22:44




I don't think you can. I can't see an open bug for it either.
– stuartd
Nov 13 at 22:44










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
1
down vote



accepted










Add-ons



At least through version 63, Firefox lacks a native feature to selectively control which add-ons are allowed in private mode; the enabled/disabled status of each is the same in private mode (although all add-ons are required to comply with the private mode rules regarding data retention). But there's a workaround to accomplish what you want.



You can have more than one profile, and each profile is independent as far as what add-ons are installed or enabled.




  • Create a new profile, including just the add-ons you want in private mode. If you're in Firefox, enter about:profiles in the URL window, and that has an option to create a new one.


  • Create a shortcut to launch Firefox in private mode using that profile. The command line would look like:



    firefox -private -P "new_profile_name"




Bookmarks and Other Profile Content



As you note in a comment, this still isn't exactly the same as the Chrome feature because Chrome retains other settings and information, like bookmarks, in incognito mode. So you need a second workaround if you want that similarity.



You can do that with controlled syncing. Firefox has a feature that allows you to selectively synchronize most of what reflects "you": preferences, add-ons, log-ins, history, bookmarks, etc. It can be accessed through Preferences | Firefox Account.



You obviously don't want to synchronize some of those options with a private mode profile. For example, add-ons (since you want them to be different). You also probably don't want to sync history (Firefox won't retain the history when you finish the session, but I'm not sure whether it would sync the visited sites during the session, and that would defeat the purpose of private mode). Login information is another thing private mode erases at the end of the session, so you probably don't want to sync that.



In any profile, the sync selections control what that profile shares with, and updates from, your other profiles. So you can have several computers that share everything, and a private mode profile that only shares and updates certain options.



Syncing uses an email address as a unique identifier. You create an account tied to an email address. Firefox will remember the account ID for you and automatically sync when you start or there is something to update (or you can activate and deactivate syncing manually).



If you will want a lot of add-ons in private mode, you might want to initially sync them just to install all of your current add-ons in the private mode profile. Then deselect add-ons for syncing, and remove or disable the ones you don't want active in private mode.



Profiles vs. Portable Firefox



Firefox, itself, is like a browsing "engine". Everything you do that makes it different for you is stored in your profile, which is located separate from the Firefox application software. That includes preferences you set, add-ons, the history of sites you visit, your bookmarks, etc. When you update Firefox, it updates the software, but doesn't touch your profile (well, except to verify that all of your add-ons are still compatible).



This also allows things like having multiple users on one computer, or a user with multiple profiles, while requiring only one copy of the Firefox software to be taking up space on your drive. Your "user experience" comes from the Firefox application using your profile.



Downloading a separate portable Firefox, as you suggest in a comment, would produce sort of a similar result, but it's not the same. That would add another copy of the Firefox application just to get another profile. There are also some subtle differences in the portable version, like it can have only a single profile.






share|improve this answer























  • Thank you. Some follow-ups: 1. I looked into this profile option but it seems like it will have it's own bookmarks too. Any way to access the same bookmarks 2. This profile option seems the same as downloading a separate portable Firefox and configuirng that with no add-on. Is that correct?
    – get_going
    Nov 14 at 13:30










  • @get_going, good points. Too much to address in a comment, so I'll expand the answer.
    – fixer1234
    2 days ago










  • Hi fixer1234, thanks for the detailed explanation. I will try out your suggestions and report back. Meanwhile, can you tell me something. I'm sure that developers of Firfox would have give this some thought. And you state that, "add-ons are required to comply with the private mode rules". Is that really the case in reality? Can I assume that no add-on would surreptitiously record my sites in private made, or maliciously store login info?
    – get_going
    2 days ago










  • @get_going, I'm not familiar with what screening developers need to go through to get their add-ons in the Mozilla add-on repository (grabbing add-ons off the Internet outside of that is at your own risk). Private mode is pretty straight-forward. Certain things, like history, cookies, etc. are defined as stuff that is supposed to be deleted upon exit; it's just prescribed behavior. There is no reason for a developer to make their add-on work differently. Doing things surreptitiously or maliciously defines an add-on as malware, which is completely different. (cont'd)
    – fixer1234
    2 days ago






  • 1




    All browser developers have controls in place to try to pre-screen for that and to remove offending add-ons if discovered, and your antivirus software screens for that. I don't know if 100% of Firefox add-ons are open-source, but I think most of it is. It's tougher to hide malware in code that anyone can look at. So, like any software you load on your computer, there is some chance that malware will slip through, but add-ons from the browser's repository are generally as safe as you'll find from any trusted source.
    – fixer1234
    2 days ago











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1 Answer
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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

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oldest

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active

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up vote
1
down vote



accepted










Add-ons



At least through version 63, Firefox lacks a native feature to selectively control which add-ons are allowed in private mode; the enabled/disabled status of each is the same in private mode (although all add-ons are required to comply with the private mode rules regarding data retention). But there's a workaround to accomplish what you want.



You can have more than one profile, and each profile is independent as far as what add-ons are installed or enabled.




  • Create a new profile, including just the add-ons you want in private mode. If you're in Firefox, enter about:profiles in the URL window, and that has an option to create a new one.


  • Create a shortcut to launch Firefox in private mode using that profile. The command line would look like:



    firefox -private -P "new_profile_name"




Bookmarks and Other Profile Content



As you note in a comment, this still isn't exactly the same as the Chrome feature because Chrome retains other settings and information, like bookmarks, in incognito mode. So you need a second workaround if you want that similarity.



You can do that with controlled syncing. Firefox has a feature that allows you to selectively synchronize most of what reflects "you": preferences, add-ons, log-ins, history, bookmarks, etc. It can be accessed through Preferences | Firefox Account.



You obviously don't want to synchronize some of those options with a private mode profile. For example, add-ons (since you want them to be different). You also probably don't want to sync history (Firefox won't retain the history when you finish the session, but I'm not sure whether it would sync the visited sites during the session, and that would defeat the purpose of private mode). Login information is another thing private mode erases at the end of the session, so you probably don't want to sync that.



In any profile, the sync selections control what that profile shares with, and updates from, your other profiles. So you can have several computers that share everything, and a private mode profile that only shares and updates certain options.



Syncing uses an email address as a unique identifier. You create an account tied to an email address. Firefox will remember the account ID for you and automatically sync when you start or there is something to update (or you can activate and deactivate syncing manually).



If you will want a lot of add-ons in private mode, you might want to initially sync them just to install all of your current add-ons in the private mode profile. Then deselect add-ons for syncing, and remove or disable the ones you don't want active in private mode.



Profiles vs. Portable Firefox



Firefox, itself, is like a browsing "engine". Everything you do that makes it different for you is stored in your profile, which is located separate from the Firefox application software. That includes preferences you set, add-ons, the history of sites you visit, your bookmarks, etc. When you update Firefox, it updates the software, but doesn't touch your profile (well, except to verify that all of your add-ons are still compatible).



This also allows things like having multiple users on one computer, or a user with multiple profiles, while requiring only one copy of the Firefox software to be taking up space on your drive. Your "user experience" comes from the Firefox application using your profile.



Downloading a separate portable Firefox, as you suggest in a comment, would produce sort of a similar result, but it's not the same. That would add another copy of the Firefox application just to get another profile. There are also some subtle differences in the portable version, like it can have only a single profile.






share|improve this answer























  • Thank you. Some follow-ups: 1. I looked into this profile option but it seems like it will have it's own bookmarks too. Any way to access the same bookmarks 2. This profile option seems the same as downloading a separate portable Firefox and configuirng that with no add-on. Is that correct?
    – get_going
    Nov 14 at 13:30










  • @get_going, good points. Too much to address in a comment, so I'll expand the answer.
    – fixer1234
    2 days ago










  • Hi fixer1234, thanks for the detailed explanation. I will try out your suggestions and report back. Meanwhile, can you tell me something. I'm sure that developers of Firfox would have give this some thought. And you state that, "add-ons are required to comply with the private mode rules". Is that really the case in reality? Can I assume that no add-on would surreptitiously record my sites in private made, or maliciously store login info?
    – get_going
    2 days ago










  • @get_going, I'm not familiar with what screening developers need to go through to get their add-ons in the Mozilla add-on repository (grabbing add-ons off the Internet outside of that is at your own risk). Private mode is pretty straight-forward. Certain things, like history, cookies, etc. are defined as stuff that is supposed to be deleted upon exit; it's just prescribed behavior. There is no reason for a developer to make their add-on work differently. Doing things surreptitiously or maliciously defines an add-on as malware, which is completely different. (cont'd)
    – fixer1234
    2 days ago






  • 1




    All browser developers have controls in place to try to pre-screen for that and to remove offending add-ons if discovered, and your antivirus software screens for that. I don't know if 100% of Firefox add-ons are open-source, but I think most of it is. It's tougher to hide malware in code that anyone can look at. So, like any software you load on your computer, there is some chance that malware will slip through, but add-ons from the browser's repository are generally as safe as you'll find from any trusted source.
    – fixer1234
    2 days ago















up vote
1
down vote



accepted










Add-ons



At least through version 63, Firefox lacks a native feature to selectively control which add-ons are allowed in private mode; the enabled/disabled status of each is the same in private mode (although all add-ons are required to comply with the private mode rules regarding data retention). But there's a workaround to accomplish what you want.



You can have more than one profile, and each profile is independent as far as what add-ons are installed or enabled.




  • Create a new profile, including just the add-ons you want in private mode. If you're in Firefox, enter about:profiles in the URL window, and that has an option to create a new one.


  • Create a shortcut to launch Firefox in private mode using that profile. The command line would look like:



    firefox -private -P "new_profile_name"




Bookmarks and Other Profile Content



As you note in a comment, this still isn't exactly the same as the Chrome feature because Chrome retains other settings and information, like bookmarks, in incognito mode. So you need a second workaround if you want that similarity.



You can do that with controlled syncing. Firefox has a feature that allows you to selectively synchronize most of what reflects "you": preferences, add-ons, log-ins, history, bookmarks, etc. It can be accessed through Preferences | Firefox Account.



You obviously don't want to synchronize some of those options with a private mode profile. For example, add-ons (since you want them to be different). You also probably don't want to sync history (Firefox won't retain the history when you finish the session, but I'm not sure whether it would sync the visited sites during the session, and that would defeat the purpose of private mode). Login information is another thing private mode erases at the end of the session, so you probably don't want to sync that.



In any profile, the sync selections control what that profile shares with, and updates from, your other profiles. So you can have several computers that share everything, and a private mode profile that only shares and updates certain options.



Syncing uses an email address as a unique identifier. You create an account tied to an email address. Firefox will remember the account ID for you and automatically sync when you start or there is something to update (or you can activate and deactivate syncing manually).



If you will want a lot of add-ons in private mode, you might want to initially sync them just to install all of your current add-ons in the private mode profile. Then deselect add-ons for syncing, and remove or disable the ones you don't want active in private mode.



Profiles vs. Portable Firefox



Firefox, itself, is like a browsing "engine". Everything you do that makes it different for you is stored in your profile, which is located separate from the Firefox application software. That includes preferences you set, add-ons, the history of sites you visit, your bookmarks, etc. When you update Firefox, it updates the software, but doesn't touch your profile (well, except to verify that all of your add-ons are still compatible).



This also allows things like having multiple users on one computer, or a user with multiple profiles, while requiring only one copy of the Firefox software to be taking up space on your drive. Your "user experience" comes from the Firefox application using your profile.



Downloading a separate portable Firefox, as you suggest in a comment, would produce sort of a similar result, but it's not the same. That would add another copy of the Firefox application just to get another profile. There are also some subtle differences in the portable version, like it can have only a single profile.






share|improve this answer























  • Thank you. Some follow-ups: 1. I looked into this profile option but it seems like it will have it's own bookmarks too. Any way to access the same bookmarks 2. This profile option seems the same as downloading a separate portable Firefox and configuirng that with no add-on. Is that correct?
    – get_going
    Nov 14 at 13:30










  • @get_going, good points. Too much to address in a comment, so I'll expand the answer.
    – fixer1234
    2 days ago










  • Hi fixer1234, thanks for the detailed explanation. I will try out your suggestions and report back. Meanwhile, can you tell me something. I'm sure that developers of Firfox would have give this some thought. And you state that, "add-ons are required to comply with the private mode rules". Is that really the case in reality? Can I assume that no add-on would surreptitiously record my sites in private made, or maliciously store login info?
    – get_going
    2 days ago










  • @get_going, I'm not familiar with what screening developers need to go through to get their add-ons in the Mozilla add-on repository (grabbing add-ons off the Internet outside of that is at your own risk). Private mode is pretty straight-forward. Certain things, like history, cookies, etc. are defined as stuff that is supposed to be deleted upon exit; it's just prescribed behavior. There is no reason for a developer to make their add-on work differently. Doing things surreptitiously or maliciously defines an add-on as malware, which is completely different. (cont'd)
    – fixer1234
    2 days ago






  • 1




    All browser developers have controls in place to try to pre-screen for that and to remove offending add-ons if discovered, and your antivirus software screens for that. I don't know if 100% of Firefox add-ons are open-source, but I think most of it is. It's tougher to hide malware in code that anyone can look at. So, like any software you load on your computer, there is some chance that malware will slip through, but add-ons from the browser's repository are generally as safe as you'll find from any trusted source.
    – fixer1234
    2 days ago













up vote
1
down vote



accepted







up vote
1
down vote



accepted






Add-ons



At least through version 63, Firefox lacks a native feature to selectively control which add-ons are allowed in private mode; the enabled/disabled status of each is the same in private mode (although all add-ons are required to comply with the private mode rules regarding data retention). But there's a workaround to accomplish what you want.



You can have more than one profile, and each profile is independent as far as what add-ons are installed or enabled.




  • Create a new profile, including just the add-ons you want in private mode. If you're in Firefox, enter about:profiles in the URL window, and that has an option to create a new one.


  • Create a shortcut to launch Firefox in private mode using that profile. The command line would look like:



    firefox -private -P "new_profile_name"




Bookmarks and Other Profile Content



As you note in a comment, this still isn't exactly the same as the Chrome feature because Chrome retains other settings and information, like bookmarks, in incognito mode. So you need a second workaround if you want that similarity.



You can do that with controlled syncing. Firefox has a feature that allows you to selectively synchronize most of what reflects "you": preferences, add-ons, log-ins, history, bookmarks, etc. It can be accessed through Preferences | Firefox Account.



You obviously don't want to synchronize some of those options with a private mode profile. For example, add-ons (since you want them to be different). You also probably don't want to sync history (Firefox won't retain the history when you finish the session, but I'm not sure whether it would sync the visited sites during the session, and that would defeat the purpose of private mode). Login information is another thing private mode erases at the end of the session, so you probably don't want to sync that.



In any profile, the sync selections control what that profile shares with, and updates from, your other profiles. So you can have several computers that share everything, and a private mode profile that only shares and updates certain options.



Syncing uses an email address as a unique identifier. You create an account tied to an email address. Firefox will remember the account ID for you and automatically sync when you start or there is something to update (or you can activate and deactivate syncing manually).



If you will want a lot of add-ons in private mode, you might want to initially sync them just to install all of your current add-ons in the private mode profile. Then deselect add-ons for syncing, and remove or disable the ones you don't want active in private mode.



Profiles vs. Portable Firefox



Firefox, itself, is like a browsing "engine". Everything you do that makes it different for you is stored in your profile, which is located separate from the Firefox application software. That includes preferences you set, add-ons, the history of sites you visit, your bookmarks, etc. When you update Firefox, it updates the software, but doesn't touch your profile (well, except to verify that all of your add-ons are still compatible).



This also allows things like having multiple users on one computer, or a user with multiple profiles, while requiring only one copy of the Firefox software to be taking up space on your drive. Your "user experience" comes from the Firefox application using your profile.



Downloading a separate portable Firefox, as you suggest in a comment, would produce sort of a similar result, but it's not the same. That would add another copy of the Firefox application just to get another profile. There are also some subtle differences in the portable version, like it can have only a single profile.






share|improve this answer














Add-ons



At least through version 63, Firefox lacks a native feature to selectively control which add-ons are allowed in private mode; the enabled/disabled status of each is the same in private mode (although all add-ons are required to comply with the private mode rules regarding data retention). But there's a workaround to accomplish what you want.



You can have more than one profile, and each profile is independent as far as what add-ons are installed or enabled.




  • Create a new profile, including just the add-ons you want in private mode. If you're in Firefox, enter about:profiles in the URL window, and that has an option to create a new one.


  • Create a shortcut to launch Firefox in private mode using that profile. The command line would look like:



    firefox -private -P "new_profile_name"




Bookmarks and Other Profile Content



As you note in a comment, this still isn't exactly the same as the Chrome feature because Chrome retains other settings and information, like bookmarks, in incognito mode. So you need a second workaround if you want that similarity.



You can do that with controlled syncing. Firefox has a feature that allows you to selectively synchronize most of what reflects "you": preferences, add-ons, log-ins, history, bookmarks, etc. It can be accessed through Preferences | Firefox Account.



You obviously don't want to synchronize some of those options with a private mode profile. For example, add-ons (since you want them to be different). You also probably don't want to sync history (Firefox won't retain the history when you finish the session, but I'm not sure whether it would sync the visited sites during the session, and that would defeat the purpose of private mode). Login information is another thing private mode erases at the end of the session, so you probably don't want to sync that.



In any profile, the sync selections control what that profile shares with, and updates from, your other profiles. So you can have several computers that share everything, and a private mode profile that only shares and updates certain options.



Syncing uses an email address as a unique identifier. You create an account tied to an email address. Firefox will remember the account ID for you and automatically sync when you start or there is something to update (or you can activate and deactivate syncing manually).



If you will want a lot of add-ons in private mode, you might want to initially sync them just to install all of your current add-ons in the private mode profile. Then deselect add-ons for syncing, and remove or disable the ones you don't want active in private mode.



Profiles vs. Portable Firefox



Firefox, itself, is like a browsing "engine". Everything you do that makes it different for you is stored in your profile, which is located separate from the Firefox application software. That includes preferences you set, add-ons, the history of sites you visit, your bookmarks, etc. When you update Firefox, it updates the software, but doesn't touch your profile (well, except to verify that all of your add-ons are still compatible).



This also allows things like having multiple users on one computer, or a user with multiple profiles, while requiring only one copy of the Firefox software to be taking up space on your drive. Your "user experience" comes from the Firefox application using your profile.



Downloading a separate portable Firefox, as you suggest in a comment, would produce sort of a similar result, but it's not the same. That would add another copy of the Firefox application just to get another profile. There are also some subtle differences in the portable version, like it can have only a single profile.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 2 days ago

























answered Nov 14 at 8:07









fixer1234

17.2k144280




17.2k144280












  • Thank you. Some follow-ups: 1. I looked into this profile option but it seems like it will have it's own bookmarks too. Any way to access the same bookmarks 2. This profile option seems the same as downloading a separate portable Firefox and configuirng that with no add-on. Is that correct?
    – get_going
    Nov 14 at 13:30










  • @get_going, good points. Too much to address in a comment, so I'll expand the answer.
    – fixer1234
    2 days ago










  • Hi fixer1234, thanks for the detailed explanation. I will try out your suggestions and report back. Meanwhile, can you tell me something. I'm sure that developers of Firfox would have give this some thought. And you state that, "add-ons are required to comply with the private mode rules". Is that really the case in reality? Can I assume that no add-on would surreptitiously record my sites in private made, or maliciously store login info?
    – get_going
    2 days ago










  • @get_going, I'm not familiar with what screening developers need to go through to get their add-ons in the Mozilla add-on repository (grabbing add-ons off the Internet outside of that is at your own risk). Private mode is pretty straight-forward. Certain things, like history, cookies, etc. are defined as stuff that is supposed to be deleted upon exit; it's just prescribed behavior. There is no reason for a developer to make their add-on work differently. Doing things surreptitiously or maliciously defines an add-on as malware, which is completely different. (cont'd)
    – fixer1234
    2 days ago






  • 1




    All browser developers have controls in place to try to pre-screen for that and to remove offending add-ons if discovered, and your antivirus software screens for that. I don't know if 100% of Firefox add-ons are open-source, but I think most of it is. It's tougher to hide malware in code that anyone can look at. So, like any software you load on your computer, there is some chance that malware will slip through, but add-ons from the browser's repository are generally as safe as you'll find from any trusted source.
    – fixer1234
    2 days ago


















  • Thank you. Some follow-ups: 1. I looked into this profile option but it seems like it will have it's own bookmarks too. Any way to access the same bookmarks 2. This profile option seems the same as downloading a separate portable Firefox and configuirng that with no add-on. Is that correct?
    – get_going
    Nov 14 at 13:30










  • @get_going, good points. Too much to address in a comment, so I'll expand the answer.
    – fixer1234
    2 days ago










  • Hi fixer1234, thanks for the detailed explanation. I will try out your suggestions and report back. Meanwhile, can you tell me something. I'm sure that developers of Firfox would have give this some thought. And you state that, "add-ons are required to comply with the private mode rules". Is that really the case in reality? Can I assume that no add-on would surreptitiously record my sites in private made, or maliciously store login info?
    – get_going
    2 days ago










  • @get_going, I'm not familiar with what screening developers need to go through to get their add-ons in the Mozilla add-on repository (grabbing add-ons off the Internet outside of that is at your own risk). Private mode is pretty straight-forward. Certain things, like history, cookies, etc. are defined as stuff that is supposed to be deleted upon exit; it's just prescribed behavior. There is no reason for a developer to make their add-on work differently. Doing things surreptitiously or maliciously defines an add-on as malware, which is completely different. (cont'd)
    – fixer1234
    2 days ago






  • 1




    All browser developers have controls in place to try to pre-screen for that and to remove offending add-ons if discovered, and your antivirus software screens for that. I don't know if 100% of Firefox add-ons are open-source, but I think most of it is. It's tougher to hide malware in code that anyone can look at. So, like any software you load on your computer, there is some chance that malware will slip through, but add-ons from the browser's repository are generally as safe as you'll find from any trusted source.
    – fixer1234
    2 days ago
















Thank you. Some follow-ups: 1. I looked into this profile option but it seems like it will have it's own bookmarks too. Any way to access the same bookmarks 2. This profile option seems the same as downloading a separate portable Firefox and configuirng that with no add-on. Is that correct?
– get_going
Nov 14 at 13:30




Thank you. Some follow-ups: 1. I looked into this profile option but it seems like it will have it's own bookmarks too. Any way to access the same bookmarks 2. This profile option seems the same as downloading a separate portable Firefox and configuirng that with no add-on. Is that correct?
– get_going
Nov 14 at 13:30












@get_going, good points. Too much to address in a comment, so I'll expand the answer.
– fixer1234
2 days ago




@get_going, good points. Too much to address in a comment, so I'll expand the answer.
– fixer1234
2 days ago












Hi fixer1234, thanks for the detailed explanation. I will try out your suggestions and report back. Meanwhile, can you tell me something. I'm sure that developers of Firfox would have give this some thought. And you state that, "add-ons are required to comply with the private mode rules". Is that really the case in reality? Can I assume that no add-on would surreptitiously record my sites in private made, or maliciously store login info?
– get_going
2 days ago




Hi fixer1234, thanks for the detailed explanation. I will try out your suggestions and report back. Meanwhile, can you tell me something. I'm sure that developers of Firfox would have give this some thought. And you state that, "add-ons are required to comply with the private mode rules". Is that really the case in reality? Can I assume that no add-on would surreptitiously record my sites in private made, or maliciously store login info?
– get_going
2 days ago












@get_going, I'm not familiar with what screening developers need to go through to get their add-ons in the Mozilla add-on repository (grabbing add-ons off the Internet outside of that is at your own risk). Private mode is pretty straight-forward. Certain things, like history, cookies, etc. are defined as stuff that is supposed to be deleted upon exit; it's just prescribed behavior. There is no reason for a developer to make their add-on work differently. Doing things surreptitiously or maliciously defines an add-on as malware, which is completely different. (cont'd)
– fixer1234
2 days ago




@get_going, I'm not familiar with what screening developers need to go through to get their add-ons in the Mozilla add-on repository (grabbing add-ons off the Internet outside of that is at your own risk). Private mode is pretty straight-forward. Certain things, like history, cookies, etc. are defined as stuff that is supposed to be deleted upon exit; it's just prescribed behavior. There is no reason for a developer to make their add-on work differently. Doing things surreptitiously or maliciously defines an add-on as malware, which is completely different. (cont'd)
– fixer1234
2 days ago




1




1




All browser developers have controls in place to try to pre-screen for that and to remove offending add-ons if discovered, and your antivirus software screens for that. I don't know if 100% of Firefox add-ons are open-source, but I think most of it is. It's tougher to hide malware in code that anyone can look at. So, like any software you load on your computer, there is some chance that malware will slip through, but add-ons from the browser's repository are generally as safe as you'll find from any trusted source.
– fixer1234
2 days ago




All browser developers have controls in place to try to pre-screen for that and to remove offending add-ons if discovered, and your antivirus software screens for that. I don't know if 100% of Firefox add-ons are open-source, but I think most of it is. It's tougher to hide malware in code that anyone can look at. So, like any software you load on your computer, there is some chance that malware will slip through, but add-ons from the browser's repository are generally as safe as you'll find from any trusted source.
– fixer1234
2 days ago










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