They did not ditch WebKit for Blink, they ditched it for Gecko (Firefox), which is a good thing IMO.
They did not ditch WebKit for Blink, they ditched it for Gecko (Firefox), which is a good thing IMO.
You’d be surprised how much soldiers care about facial hair
No it’s not. Kodi is XBMC, they just changed the name.
Edit: straight from the horses mouth https://kodi.tv/article/xbmc-getting-new-name-introducing-kodi-14/
It’s fun
Plex is actually a fork of Kodi (XBMC). Kodi is still actively developed, and easily supports both local media (for example, downloaded using one of the *arrs) and streaming from various sources using addons.
Yeah I’ll do some investigating, good to know that the Tor browser isn’t at fault though (I probably should’ve operated under this assumption in the first place).
Just did a fresh install on Linux (fresh download too) and unfortunately, with no settings changed except security to “Safer”, it once again identified me across multiple sessions.
FWIW it does change my ID if I resize the window enough to jump to a different size letterbox.
Edit: forgot to mention, the fresh install got a different ID ti the previous install.
I should test again then, not sure what happened
Completely vanilla, fully stopped and restarted the browser. This was right after the 13.0 update.
You’re right. What I meant was that you lose Mullvad’s fingerprinting resistance by installing extensions, but if you’re only looking for a hardened Firefox with auto updates then it’s fine.
Mullvad browser + extensions is pointless, might as well use LibreWolf or just harden Firefox yourself.
The point of the Mullvad browser is to not stand out from the crowd; by installing extensions you are definitely standing out.
There is also fingerprint.com, which I tend to trust more since it’s a company that literally sells fingerprinting tech to other companies.
It managed to identify me while using the Tor browser on “Safer” (doesn’t work on “Safest” due to JS). Edit: this is likely due to an issue with my install, and not the browser itself.
Many parts of your browser’s fingerprint which can be randomized are well known to tracking companies, so your strategy isn’t perfect.
Your Mullvad result seems too high btw, though I don’t have access to my computer right now to compare.
Almost no browser has the same fingerprint as yours, which makes it nearly unique.
Fallout New Vegas, Dark Souls/Sekiro (can’t decide), Hotline Miami
The kernel might be Linux, but the userspace is what makes it Android.
A modern smartphone (good battery, screen, etc.) running an alternative OS (like Linux or OpenBSD) with the ability to run Android (or iOS) apps I unfortunately need to use.
I recently switched to a Pixel 7a with GrapheneOS and while it’s nice, I still really hate the locked down nature of Android (and iOS).
Stadia is Google
Make a Linux app, make a Linux distro, who cares…
How about you just let people do what they enjoy doing.