Firefox for Android users get a taste of what they can expect from open extensions before the big reveal next month
• Firefox for Android is reintroducing an open ecosystem of extensions, set to be available on December 14, with a dedicated extension page for easy discovery.
• Mozilla has released a preview of the upcoming extensions, including popular ones like Bitwarden's password manager and AdGuard's ad blocker.
• Firefox aims to gain an advantage over rivals like Google Chrome by supporting a wide range of third-party extensions on Android, while Firefox extensions availability on iOS remains uncertain.
It really hasn't been that bad. Firefox mobile had ublock origin all this time, which is of course critical to being able to use the web today.
There are a few other plugins too, and now they are going to add a lot more. Sounds like good news. I'm not unhappy about mobile Firefox at all, I've been on it all this time
They should add the ability to switch the "Home" button to Addons button for quick access. I don't remember if I ever used that home button, but I'm constantly using the menu button, going to addons, then the add-on itself. It would make it much easier since extensions are one of the main highlights of Firefox Android.
Nice to see FF doing the work and opening doors to so many extensions.
The few things I have encountered on FF that are still a major PITA for me:
Sometimes tabs gets corrupted in sense that they just wont load any data and show data of the tab that was shown previously. navigating to other domain and stuff wont work. (Encountered it in Private mode)
first point drives me mad, happens every now and then, a workaround is to close the tab and undo that, gets it to work again.
Happens in normal mode as well
I remember seeing a GitHub Issue regarding this year or two ago. IDK what happened after that since they moved to BugZilla.
If you know the BugZilla Link to the issue, then please do share with me, so that I can subscribe to it. I tried looking for it but maybe I wasn't framing it right? This type of issue should not even exist at this point tbh.
Mozilla is bringing back extensions for Firefox on Android, which were removed in 2020 for security reasons and interface overhaul.
Firefox extensions will officially be available on Android on December 14, with a dedicated extension page now available in preview to help users discover new content.
Firefox will be the only major Android browser supporting an open extension ecosystem, allowing users to create and explore new extensions for the browser.
They refactored the app in 2020 and they decided that they didn’t want to build robust support for the extension architecture that they were going to migrate away from. And the new architecture was going to be more open and more secure.
It wasn’t that they were intentionally disabling a feature because of a security vulnerability. It was that they didn’t want to rebuild the old busted thing when a better solution was on the roadmap.
Although, the planning around this was shit. A three year gap wasn’t great.
the only thing i really want is some startpage extension so i could have bookmarks there... but i'm afraid those will not work. currently it's absolutely idiotic, there are a few last websites from history (which you can't pin anymore) and recent bookmarks, which is useless with sync because everything i bookmark on pc fills up the few recents on mobile. on vivaldi you can decide what is on the speed dial.
uBlock Origin is always the obvious answer.
SponsorBlock for YouTube.
FastForward to skip the delay on link shorteners.
Reverse Image Search does what it says.
Imagus enlarges any image you hover over with your mouse and saves you clicks, but can get in the way sometimes.
Flag Cookies has a lot of uses, but it's mostly there to just grab my Google Drive cookies so I can download things a lot more efficiently with jdownloader2.
Recipe Filter if you're trying to cook something but don't want the writer's autobiography.
ColorZilla if for whatever reason you want to steal the exact color code of a thing in your browser.
So is there a reason you bitching that a privacy invasive company is being by a less privacy invasive one so the product can be less privacy invasive? I can't understand this weird "Oh I'm so smart" gotcha.