this post was submitted on 21 Nov 2023
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• Firefox offers better privacy and security than Chrome, with upcoming support for 200 new add-ons. • While Chrome dominates, Firefox gains ground with user-friendly browsing experience and open-source model. • Mozilla's focus on user privacy and transparency challenges Google's ad-centric approach, making Firefox a viable alternative.

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[–] barsoap@lemm.ee 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

all ports above 1024 are by default blocked

Not on localhost at least no it isn't.

And why the hell would you be using ftp in currentyear. Newsflash: They also ditched gopher.

Never came across a video on the modern web that firefox couldn't play. Everything post-flash should really be fine.


What actually annoys me about all browsers are the policies around loading certain stuff from file://. Try getting something wasm to run without serving the thing from a web server or, *shudder*, base64-encoding bitcode into html. I understand there's some valid gripes around ../ and softlinks and whatnot but, wait, hear me out: What about zipping everything up and calling it a webapp, treat the file as a domain.

[–] earmuff@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 1 year ago

Oh it was never my intention to use it, but I was playing a bit with OpenAL and HRTF and ended up on a webpage that actually was using FTP to provide some audio files. So I kinda had no other choice.

The video thing is actually a known issue, but might be due to OpenSUSE not providing codecs by default. I still wonder why Chromium was working, though.