![]() ![]() Mozilla today estimated that Firefox has blocked more than 450 billion tracking requests since July 2 (some 10 billion every day). It blocks cross-site tracking cookies from sites like Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn. With Firefox 70, Mozilla now also includes social tracking protection under the Standard setting. Third-party tracking cookies from over 2,500 tracking domains are blocked without users having to change anything. Custom: For those who want complete control to pick and choose what trackers and cookies they want to block.įirefox 69 arrived in September with Enhanced Tracking Protection turned on by default.Strict: For people who want a bit more protection and don’t mind if some sites break.Standard: The default, where Firefox blocks known trackers and third-party tracking cookies in general.Firefox 65, released in January, added Content Blocking controls with three options for the blocking feature: Firefox 63 arrived in October with Enhanced Tracking Protection, blocking cookies and storage access from third-party trackers. In August 2018, Mozilla announced Firefox would block trackers by default. ![]()
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