Fingerprint.com allows you to test web fingerprinting. This is a more advanced method of tracking individuals throughout the web without the need of cookies.
Mozilla The Tor Project developed a pretty effective toll tool against this called resistFingerprinting. It can be enabled in about:config. LibreWolf has this feature enabled by default. Sadly, it doesn’t really work.
On Firefox you can visit fingerprint.com in a private window with resistFingerprinting enabled and after closing the private window and visiting fingerprint.com again, there will be a new id meaning that you have not been tracked.
On LibreWolf you can do the exact same thing but the same id will show up every time. Is there a way to configure LibreWolf to be more effective at resisting fingerprinting?
On LibreWolf you can do the exact same thing but the same id will show up everytime. To get the same functionality as Firefox you need to install the Canvas Blocker extension.
Original title of this post: LibreWolf doesn’t resist fingerprinting effectively
I’m testing in #librewolf latest release (v116.0-1) and I got different fingerprint ID when I open fringerprint.com in a private window and then I close and open it in a normal window.
Is your librewolf updated?My LibreWolf is updated to version 116.0-1 (64-bit) and fingerprint.com still shows the exact same ID. I even wiped the installation and clean-installed it. (Which did give me a new ID). Which OS are you running LibreWolf on? I’m on Linux
@illectrility @librewolf
I’m on windows 11
https://librewolf.net/docs/testing/ says:
These tests are not intended to be used as oracles, but rather as a way to check your setup and verify that your changes are applied. You should not read too much into the results unless you are sure you understand them, as explained in this article.
https://blog.pastly.net/posts/2019-01-19-about-to-use-tor/#testing-your-fingerprint
BTW I commented about this in the past, see https://gitlab.com/librewolf-community/browser/windows/-/issues/276#note_1137125815
This feels like the solution is in the definition of the problem. Why not stick to Firefox?
LibreWolf has some nice things going for it. A lot of privacy stuff is pre-configured and it saves time that way but yeah, if stuff like this simply doesn’t work I’ll be going back to Firefox asap
@illectrility @Illecors Some website logins don’t work e.g.duolingo
There is an extension that adds a button to toggle the fingerprinting resistance. You can look for it at about:addons