stoutfellow: My summer look (Summer)
stoutfellow ([personal profile] stoutfellow) wrote2019-05-05 04:57 am
Entry tags:

Add-Offs

I am well and truly pissed at Firefox this morning. I don't have many add-ons, but the ones I have are either important or very useful. The add-on glitch they're dealing with has disabled both of my ad blockers, two of my security add-ons, and my feed reader. The "studies" link says it's already run on my computer, but the add-ons are still hors de combat.

Six hours, they say. OK, I'll give them until 10:30 before I start screaming.
graydon: (Default)

[personal profile] graydon 2019-05-05 11:46 am (UTC)(link)
It's not, strictly, a glitch; it's a bug in the security of the update system.

Firefox turned it off because otherwise the update system could be used to completely own -- totally circumventing all of the core update security mechanisms -- your firefox install. (Firefox is effectively an operating system. This is the bad side of that.) This has been an increasing problem with all browsers; malevolent actors push a browser version they own via the update, and from the user perspective neither you nor your anti-virus can tell. It's a browser application with automatic updates and security certificates and everything, just malicious ones.
graydon: (Default)

[personal profile] graydon 2019-05-06 12:38 pm (UTC)(link)
In the strict sense, nothing will be restored; all pre-shutdown versions of firefox will stay shut down.

[Edited for both links] https://twitter.com/firefox/status/1125135184343396352?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Etweet says that the latest version of Firefox re-enables all the plugins; I have not tried this myself. (The only things I use firefox for oblige me to use stock firefox.)

So it looks like what you need to do is upgrade Firefox to latest (per https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/update-firefox-latest-release ) and things should start working again.
Edited 2019-05-06 12:40 (UTC)
graydon: (Default)

[personal profile] graydon 2019-05-06 02:19 pm (UTC)(link)
You're welcome!

It'd be nice if Firefox doesn't manage to provide an existence proof of the idea that a volunteer-run browser project is no longer able to handle the threat surface.