Firefox Multi-Account Containers has to be one of my favorite extensions. Mixing work accounts and personal accounts in the same browser session but in different tabs has made my workflow much more efficient. You can force bind sites to a container so that you don't accidentally use your personal account for anything workplace related.
Technology
A nice place to discuss rumors, happenings, innovations, and challenges in the technology sphere. We also welcome discussions on the intersections of technology and society. If it’s technological news or discussion of technology, it probably belongs here.
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Definetely libredirect. It redirects YouTube, Twitter, TikTok... requests to privacy friendly frontends.
Dark Reader, because dark mode rocks.
Count this as my vote as well. Take every other extension away (uBlock Origin excluded obv) but I simply can't endure the eye-searing pain of the internet without Dark Reader.
I shared one on reddit that replaces pictures of spiders with kittens and it was met with a pretty shocking amount of hatred and vitriol brought my way, so nervous to share it here. But still I thought it was nice.
I had a similar one but for the former president. I still have it installed and it always confuses me for a second until I remember it.
Wait. No, share it. Please! 🥺
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/spiders-kittens-image-replacer/
here it is for firefox. I think there's one for chrome and for edge too
- uBlock Origin
- Dark Reader
- Bypass Paywalls
- Decentraleyes
- Enhancer for YouTube
- Return YouTube Dislike
- Consent-O-Matic - Automatic handling of GDPR consent forms
- DuckDuckGo Privacy Essentials - I mostly use this for the email protection
- ScrollAnywhere - Drag scrollbar with middlemouse button anywhere on the page.
Other than Ublock Origin and Bitwarden, these are some of my favourites :
Temporary Containers is a new favourite of mine. It works just like container tabs, but the difference is that it deletes the history of that tab once it's closed, similar to Incognito/Private instance.
Reddit Comments for Youtube - If a youtube video has been linked to reddit, then it basically gives a small box which lists all the subs the video has been linked to and shows you the comments. If you're logged into reddit, then it will allow you to comment as well.
Keepa for Amazon. Let's you track price history for any product, so you can see if a sale is actually a real sale or not.
Tab Session Manager - Basically lets you save tab sessions.
Enhancer for Youtube and Pockettube Subscription Manager - Gives various youtube enhancements.
Stylus - To style websites. I mainly use it to fix the youtube thumbnail and font size.
uBlock Origin
PrivacyBadger
Return YouTube Dislike
SponsorBlock
Translate (Firefox doesnt have website translation as a native feature)
I run Firefox
- AdNauseam (One step further than uBlock Origin, it actively clicks everything that missed my DNS blocks)
- Bitwarden
- Decentraleyes
- Enhance-O-Tron for Plex (For some reason some videos in my library have black bars hard coded into them. I could probably re-encode them to get rid of the bars, but this add-on just hides the bars at a button click. It's only a problem for monitors wider than 16:9)
- Enhancer for Youtube (TM) (Automatically expand the canvas out to the full screen and a bunch of other stuff.)
- Facebook Container (I don't use facebook, but the containers are nice to keep shit separated)
- Keepa - Amazon Price Tracker
- NoScript
- Redirect AMP to HTML
- ShareX ( I have workflows that automatically store stuff into my nextcloud and setup share links)
- SponsorBlock for Youtube - Skip Sponsorships
- Stylus
I had stuff for Reddit... but since I've moved off the platform, that's been nixed. And for those of you using the cookie accepting apps... Why not just block the element with uBlock?
So, let's try to compile a list.
- "uBlock" does not need any kind of introduction. Most of the people who answered the thread use it anyway. But it is my favourite!
- "Language tool" to help me spell things properly, lol
- "I don't care about cookies" to get rid of annoying GDPR-compliance banners
- "FoxyProxy" to easily switch between proxies
- "Vimium C" to navigate the web using vi-like shortcuts
- "SponsorBlock". I don't use YouTube as much nowadays but when I do, this add-on helps me skip in-video advertisements and irrelevant moments
- "Search by image"
- "Rikaichamp" is a great add-on for anyone who often needs to look up Japanese words
- "Runet Censorship Bypass" because censorship circumvention is not a crime in my country. Yet.
Honestly, I thought it will be shorter. It makes me appreciate the authors of all these add-ons even more. If it weren't for their efforts, web browsing would be a much less enjoyable experience.
In case you didn't know, the "I don't care about cookies" extension was recently sold to Avast. I don't know if anyone has seen them make any sketchy changes yet, but personally I didn't want to trust them and uninstalled it
Oh, well, that's too bad. Thank you for pointing this out!
Apparently, there is now a debloated fork "I still don't care about cookies"
Why fork?
This extension has been acquired by Avast and I simply don't trust Avast with my data. >Additionally, having it on Github allows us to improve the code and add support for >websites faster.
Other than the good ole ad blocker, sponsorblock is a godsend
My half-serious, half-assed alternative to SB: https://butter.sonnet.io
Dark Reader is amazing. Not just a great idea, but incredible execution.
from https://beehaw.org/comment/80030:
uBO, of course. note: you guys don't need ClearURLs with this list added.
LibRedirect for automatically opening Youtube, Twitter, TikTok etc. links in their privacy-focused front-ends. I just make sure to disable all the instances by esmailelbob since he's a little homophobic shithead
Buster for automatic captcha solving
Consent-O-Matic automatically clicks through cookies banner to deny all the cookies that aren't necessary, which I like better than just hiding the cookie banner
Redirect AMP to HTML because fuck AMP and fuck Google
...I just make sure to disable all the instances by esmailelbob since he's a little homophobic shithead
What? ...alright let's check the link.
Esmail is actively forbidding members or supporters of the LGBTQIA+ community to use their services via a TOS document.
Oh.
When you're so drenched in queerphobia that you explicitly forbid the use of your services to LGBTQIA+ people and their 'supporters'. Asbolutely normal and totally not deranged behavior.
I'm using FF and I only have one extension, it's ublock origin
- JShelter actively fights fingerprinting.
- NoScript blocks by domain by default.
- uBlock Origin with cookie list to block ads, trackers, and hide cookie banners.
- DarkReader to help the eyes.
- Stylus to fix any CSS not fixed by the rest.
-
LibRedirect Alternative open source frontends, very useful to survive on sites like Youtube, Twitter, Imgur etc.
-
Voat - Reddit Comments on YouTube & Web Pages Not so useful any more, but you can read what Reddit communities have to say about websites
-
Snowflake Fight cencorship
Cookieautodelete is sooo underrated.
- ublock origin
- privacy badger
- decentraleyes
- clear URLs
- facebook container
- https everywhere
- firefox multi-account containers
- dictionary anywhere
Question: Does anyone know what security and privacy extensions are considered redundant in light of recent Firefox improvements in the past few years?
For example, I saw several people recommend Privacy Badger for example. I thought I heard somewhere that was considered not needed now. I do not know for sure so am frankly confused by this and some of the other extensions which I too use to use.
For me I have kind of stopped using most security/privacy extensions except uBlockOrigin and then just configuring Firefox rather tightly. Not sure if this is best approach or not. On one hand every extension increases the attack surface and the uniqueness of the browser so there is a point about less is better, on the other hand some may be useful too.
Thoughts? Thanks.
AFAIK you don't need HTTPS Everywhere as Firefox has a built-in setting for that, and Ublock Origin covers most privacy extensions when using "hard mode" like Privacy Badger, Ghostery, DDG Privacy Essentials, ClearURLs....
Tree Style Tabs for Firefox gets installed on every Desktop install I use.
It gets quite extensive for me by now
- uBlock Origin
- Consent-O-Matic
- Dark Reader
- Bitwarden
- Tab Session Manager
- SponsorBlock for Youtube
- Return Youtube Dislike
- Clickbait Remover for Youtube
- Auto HD / 4k / 8k for YouTube
- Alternate Player for Twitch.tv
- Augmented Steam
- Show Great on Deck on Steam
- alike03's Subscription Info on Steam
- Keepa - Amazon Price Tracker
And a few additional ones for selfhosted apps like FreshRSS Checker
I think I use too many on Firefox ahahah
Ads and privacy
UBlock Origin (AdBlocker)
Privacy Badger (Blocks some trackers)
ClearURLs (removes tracking elements from URLs)
DeleteNonio (in my country, all newspapers are trying to force you to sign up for this service with an annoying popup)
Don't Track me Google (removes tracking from Google search result links)
Startpage.com (search engine)
Firefox Multi-Account containers/Facebook Container (so cookies cannot be accessed between all sites freely)
Reddit
Old Reddit Redirect (I really don't want the new design)
Reddit Enhancement Suite (nice features to have)
LeechBlock NG (to block Reddit during the blackout. See you next week...maybe)
YouTube
Enhancer for YouTube (some QoL features)
SponsorBlock for YouTube (skip sponsor parts in videos)
YouTube Auto Like (auto likes the videos you watch, depending on what you decide in the settings)
Youtube NonStop (no more "Video Paused. Continue Watching?")
QoL
Rikaichamp (translate Japanese on hover)
Augmented Steam (to check prices between stores, mostly)
Dark Reader (turn dark mode for select websites)
Firefox Translations (website translation, like Chrome and Edge have)
LanguageTool (to help me write fewer mistakes)
Metrification (convert imperial to metric on the fly)
Tampermonkey (to add some useful scripts to sites you want)
Visual
Firefox Color (to customize the theme)
Tabliss (new tab page)
Wide Github (change repos to be full width)
Stylus (add custom CSS to sites you want)
Mine's Redirector. I use it to force redirection of some URLs, for example:
- Redirecting an amp URL to a non-amp
- Redirecting the URL of a small-scaled image to the URL of the original size
- Redirecting a mobile site to its desktop equvalent (e.g. Wikipedia)
- When I was using Reddit, I also used this extension to force all links to go to old.reddit.com
One i done see mentioned is OneTab. Allows me to take large groups of tabs and dump them to a text file, which I can also use to restore groups of tabs. It allows me to close entire browsers full of tabs but keep the links to prevent firefox from getting out of hand with ram consumption.
You can do something similar without any addons. Firefox allows selection of multiple tabs at once out of the box, and you can have it create bookmarks for this selection. You can then have it open all bookmarks in a bookmark folder at once.
ublock origin, sponsorblock, return youtube dislike, clearurls and dark reader
- bitwarden
- simplelogin
- proton vpn
I just use these three.
I don't think I can live without Sidebery anymore, it adds a sidebar for managing and easily grouping tabs. Although it's really made my habit of not closing them even worse...
Firefox (I am not going to repeat the obvious ones that have been mentioned numerous times):
- IPvFoo: Display IP address information for website
- tabdetach: I always juggle around my windows. Being able to detach, attach and merge tabs is really useful.
- Cookie AutoDelete: Removes cookies unless whitelisted
I wish you’d recommended that commenters keep to “one extension per top-level comment,” making it easier to upvote the best ones 😅
Anyway, my “one pick” is definitely Tridactyl — a thorough, absurdly powerful poweruser-mode for FireFox based in Vi-like modal interaction.
One on Firefox that's super helpful for work is Simple Tab Groups. It lets me keep plenty of tabs open without it turning into a disorganized mess. Better than Chrome's built-in tab organization, imo.
Firefox: tridactyl, jumpcutter, sidebery (best tree tabs I can find), temporary containers, cookie remover