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Mozilla Firefox is a free, open-source web browser. It became a household name in the early 2000’s for popularizing functions like tabbed browsing that gave the reigning web browser of the time, Microsoft’s Internet Explorer, a run for its money. Firefox has declined in popularity in recent years, due to its difficulties in transitioning to mobile (particularly iOS), but still remains widely used. Although Firefox accepts all cookies by default, the browser actually offers more options than Chrome when it comes to customizing these settings.
Access custom settings: Click on the menu button in the upper right and select “Options.” Navigate to the “Privacy” tab and under “History” set Firefox to “Use custom settings for history.”
Manage cookies: Firefox gives you a number of options when it comes to managing your cookies: you can accept or block cookies outright, block third-party cookies, block specific third-party cookies that do not come from any site you visit, or prompt Firefox to ask for your permission every time it wants to store a cookie (running Firefox under this setting exposes just how ubiquitous cookie usage has become).
Delete cookies: Click on“Show Cookies…” which appears once you’ve enabled custom settings for your browser history. From there, you can scroll through a list of cookies accumulated by Firefox, clear them individually or remove them all as a group.
Access custom settings: Click on the menu button in the upper right and select “Options.” Navigate to the “Privacy” tab and under “History” set Firefox to “Use custom settings for history.”
Manage cookies: Firefox gives you a number of options when it comes to managing your cookies: you can accept or block cookies outright, block third-party cookies, block specific third-party cookies that do not come from any site you visit, or prompt Firefox to ask for your permission every time it wants to store a cookie (running Firefox under this setting exposes just how ubiquitous cookie usage has become).
Delete cookies: Click on“Show Cookies…” which appears once you’ve enabled custom settings for your browser history. From there, you can scroll through a list of cookies accumulated by Firefox, clear them individually or remove them all as a group.
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