[email protected] wrote: > Arve Barsnes <[email protected]> [16-02-27 10:24]: >> On 27 February 2016 at 07:14, <[email protected]> wrote: >>> Question is: Are there any other comparable good alternatives, >>> which understand the term "privacy" as it is ? >>> >> I'm not sure I understand the distinction, and I still have both >> installed, but Privacy Badger, created by the EFF, seems to have the >> most important effect that led me to Ghostery, blocking some >> third-party elements. Check it out, it might be what you need. >> >> Arve >> > Hi Arve, > > thanks for your posting ! :) > > I already tried that, but as it seems (to me) Privacy Badger > does oneself decide whether to block and item or not. > I have that one installed and was astonished how passive it > was.... > > Or simply am I doing something wrong ? > > Best regards, > Meino > > >
I found this: https://www.eff.org/document/privacy-badger-block-web-trackers When you install, I think a tutorial pops up. Maybe I went to add ons and clicked it there. Anyway, it has a page and it has like a little slide show. It shows how to adjust settings and such and talks about how it works. At first, it doesn't do much but it learns as you browse the internet. However, you can override and tell it to block everything or nothing at all according to the tutorial. If you have it installed, try this: resource://jid1-mnnxcxisbpnsxq-at-jetpack/data/firstRun.html#1 That's what is in my URL when I am on that tutorial. It may or may not work for you tho. I just installed and read up on it myself. Dale :-) :-)

