Firefox [SOLVED]
Firefox [SOLVED]
LM 18.3 Sylvia, Xfce
Why does Firefox Have so much trouble rendering some, and a lot of the ones I use, websites? Like it has trouble with http, and it insists I use https sites. Yahoo, it hates Yahoo. My bank website. And many more sites. Firefox comes with the Linux Mint, one would think that Linux Mint would wise-up and quit such a junk browser. I use it, I also Opera, mostly when Firefox isn't cooperating, Firefox used to be the best browser, but no more.
Why does Firefox Have so much trouble rendering some, and a lot of the ones I use, websites? Like it has trouble with http, and it insists I use https sites. Yahoo, it hates Yahoo. My bank website. And many more sites. Firefox comes with the Linux Mint, one would think that Linux Mint would wise-up and quit such a junk browser. I use it, I also Opera, mostly when Firefox isn't cooperating, Firefox used to be the best browser, but no more.
Last edited by chazb on Sat May 18, 2019 1:14 am, edited 1 time in total.
- Pjotr
- Level 21
- Posts: 13869
- Joined: Mon Mar 07, 2011 10:18 am
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Re: Firefox
Well, I quite like Firefox. Works fine for me.
Much more configurable than, say, Chromium or Chrome.

Much more configurable than, say, Chromium or Chrome.
Tip: 10 things to do after installing Linux Mint 19.2 Tina
Keep your Linux Mint healthy: Avoid these 10 fatal mistakes
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Keep your Linux Mint healthy: Avoid these 10 fatal mistakes
Twitter: twitter.com/easylinuxtips
All in all, horse sense simply makes sense.
Re: Firefox
Not sure what version FF you're on, but most likely it is a setting or addon/extension you've added that is wanting to 'force https' (likely culprit is addon HTTPS Everywhere). but before disable consider it's intent.
Elsewhere in the news, today, I read about google working on "solving" the mixed-content issues all browser basically have trouble with, even their flagship chrome/chromium (some browsers/engines by default just fail gracefully and unbeknownst to user, and simply serve the content, good, bad and ugly)
the problem is with mixed-content itself and why forcing it, especially on banking or other money/sensitive personal infos webpages. because it's not necessarily browser fault (eg. webpage has both http and https contents, often scripts get housed centrally and called via http, very bad idea, happening everywhere) rather browser trying to protect user from mixed content that may easily include unsafe scripts or allow 3rd party intercept vectors.
Other possible sources of frustration may be found in ad and script blocking addons (if you have/use any). Worth trying disable all addons (if any) then reenable one at a time and run through your list of problem sites to check for breakage. Continue reenable until determine the offender, remove it or tweak it, then drive on, happy(er)
I've been running IceCat lately, if you want to see broken websites then this is the deal
libreJS (free javascripts only, by default) will often give me nothing but a blank page, until one script- and often from unsecure http, gets permitted and bam, whole enchilada pops up for my viewing displeasure. (for my bank I use a tiny profile on a hardened Firefox, dedicated to money matters only 
Elsewhere in the news, today, I read about google working on "solving" the mixed-content issues all browser basically have trouble with, even their flagship chrome/chromium (some browsers/engines by default just fail gracefully and unbeknownst to user, and simply serve the content, good, bad and ugly)
the problem is with mixed-content itself and why forcing it, especially on banking or other money/sensitive personal infos webpages. because it's not necessarily browser fault (eg. webpage has both http and https contents, often scripts get housed centrally and called via http, very bad idea, happening everywhere) rather browser trying to protect user from mixed content that may easily include unsafe scripts or allow 3rd party intercept vectors.
Other possible sources of frustration may be found in ad and script blocking addons (if you have/use any). Worth trying disable all addons (if any) then reenable one at a time and run through your list of problem sites to check for breakage. Continue reenable until determine the offender, remove it or tweak it, then drive on, happy(er)

I've been running IceCat lately, if you want to see broken websites then this is the deal


- absque fenestris
- Level 6
- Posts: 1308
- Joined: Sat Nov 12, 2016 8:42 pm
- Location: Confoederatio Helvetica
Re: Firefox
IceCat is for hard boiled idiots only. Venus In Furs for the masochists...redlined wrote: ⤴Sun Feb 17, 2019 7:22 pmI've been running IceCat lately, if you want to see broken websites then this is the deallibreJS (free javascripts only, by default) will often give me nothing but a blank page, until one script- and often from unsecure http, gets permitted and bam, whole enchilada pops up for my viewing displeasure. (for my bank I use a tiny profile on a hardened Firefox, dedicated to money matters only
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Linux Mint 18.3 Sylvia (Mate) 32-bit - Acer D250 Netbook (Intel Atom N270, 2 GB RAM, 120 GB SSD)
Linux Mint 17.3 Rosa (Mate) 64-bit - MacBook Pro 15" (Intel Core2 Duo, 8 GB RAM, 240 GB SSD) - with some separation difficulties...
Linux Mint 17.3 Rosa (Mate) 64-bit - MacBook Pro 15" (Intel Core2 Duo, 8 GB RAM, 240 GB SSD) - with some separation difficulties...
Re: Firefox
By the way, has anyone looked into Cliqz?
If so, what do you think of it?
If so, what do you think of it?
Re: Firefox
well, call me Leopold the Soft boiled thenabsque fenestris wrote: ⤴Sun Feb 17, 2019 11:15 pmIceCat is for hard boiled idiots only. Venus In Furs for the masochists...redlined wrote: ⤴Sun Feb 17, 2019 7:22 pmI've been running IceCat lately, if you want to see broken websites then this is the deallibreJS (free javascripts only, by default) will often give me nothing but a blank page, until one script- and often from unsecure http, gets permitted and bam, whole enchilada pops up for my viewing displeasure. (for my bank I use a tiny profile on a hardened Firefox, dedicated to money matters only
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it does show the alarming amounts of script sources real good, and I appreciate the exercise in discipline delivered via self-inflicted pain (Army retired, so that fits

Re: Firefox
I noticed when I switched the preferences to "no proxy" many of my problems disappeared.
Re: Firefox
Now when Firefox give me problems, I will use the Vivaldi Browser.