I'm running Pale Moon. In an xterm, I did... export SSLKEYLOGFILE=/dev/shm/sslkeylogfile.txt
...and launched Pale Moon manually from the commandline. nd visited a couple of https sites. I did get /dev/shm/sslkeylogfile.txt which begins with the line... # SSL/TLS secrets log file, generated by NSS Following that are a bunch of lines starting with... CLIENT_RANDOM ...followed by a space, followed by 161 random hex-numeric characters i.e. [0-9a-f]. I also saw a line beginning with... RSA ...followed by a space, followed by 113 random hex-numeric characters i.e. [0-9a-f]. If you plan to do this regularly, your program launcher will need to launch bash scripts with seperate filenames for each profile. Maybe append date-time stamp to filenames to avoid multiple sessions overwriting each other. As for privacy, there are the usual features, like... * asking sites to not track (don't trust that) * control of which sites to accept/refuse regular cookies, and 3rd-party cookies, from * whether or not to clear browsing and download history * private browsing session -- Walter Dnes <waltd...@waltdnes.org> I don't run "desktop environments"; I run useful applications