CaffeineAddict
Well-Known Member
lol, why do you leave 1 cookie uneaten?I eat cookies.
I paid attention to the gif and there is always 1 cookie that's not eaten.
lol, why do you leave 1 cookie uneaten?I eat cookies.
Because I have to watch my calorie intake or else I get fat.lol, why do you leave 1 cookie uneaten?
I paid attention to the gif and there is always 1 cookies that's not eaten.
No reason, really... in the firefox Bookmarks | Manage Bookmarks dialog, "Backup" and "Restore" are at the top of the Import and Backup menu and they write and read json. Import from HTML and Export to HTML are further down the list so are infinitesimally less convenient to use.Why to json file? you can export them to HTML using UI.
You're right about the tracking - web sites can and will track you whether you like it or not. I find that offensive so I do what I can to make it harder and / or less clear. I do what I can to make sure that at least I'm not storing their tracking crap for them and to muddy the waters by using different user names, email addresses and personal data for different logins. If web sites want to sell my personal information or my "profile" data... well for the most part they're selling fiction and they don't need to collect data to do that - they could just make it up without my participation. My bank could (and probably does) sell me out but I they're almost the -only- ones who have the real info anyway.In my case, it's probably like "when I remember"....
Every browser on my system is set up in 'portable' format. This means config, .cache, everything is self-contained within that directory.
All of these run from a large. secondary external drive.....as do all my other 'portable' applications. Everything is only ever 'linked' into Puppy, i.e., a Menu entry, basically, from wherever they're located.
The secondary drive is 3 TB in size, and is dedicated to the 'portable' apps, Puppy "stuff" AND my media collection.....and is still barely half-full.
I probably clear cache and most cookies - apart from essential stuff for log-ins, etc - every couple of months. Just to stop things getting too unmanageable, like.
I long ago figured out websites can ( and WILL) track you whatever you do to try and stop 'em. And the more you try to make yourself anonymous online, the more attention you draw to yourself.....
Private/incognito stuff is a sop to the paranoid. It's a digital 'pacifier' for the "they're out to get me" types. It isn't worth the code it's written with.
I realise that saying this won't win me any friends, but it's modern online reality, unfortunately. We're all of us just a "commodity". No more, no less.
(shrug...)
Mike.![]()
I have yet to find to find a site capable of following my browser. it is easy to avoid unique browser ID with Firefox.You're right about the tracking - web sites can and will track you whether you like it or not.
I'm using Tiny Core so, by default, /tmp/ and ~/.mozilla/ are in RAM. The default "backup" list (shtuff that gets backed up from RAM to persistent media) includes /home/ but excludes cache directories - I've tweaked it to exclude the entire .mozilla/ directory as well, since I handle that separately anyway.I have yet to find to find a site capable of following my browser. it is easy to avoid unique browser ID with Firefox.
Obviously it has nothing to do with incognito/private settings.
Also obviously all depends on ones requirements. e.g. cookies, history, temp files can be located in RAM disk so they never will touch the disk,
more resistant options can include general (or random) hardware ID, or just plain fake stuff about everything from hardware to software installed.
Least effort is obviously with Tor browser, nevertheless avoiding unique browser ID is not very complicated.
I just keep url and search search suggestions turned off, along with "home page content".I clean cookies and history because I don't like the clutter caused by browser "suggestions". I don't need history because I never remember what and when I was searching for
Unique browser ID is created by profile so obviously cleaning cookies or history will not stop tracing browser by unique ID. If one has "pure" profile that is used to replace the old one, then unique ID is preserved so this will not prevent browser tracing.
And while I'm thinking of it, can we just -never- search from the URL bar?
Curious if you delete browsing history, cookies and cache, how often and for what reason?