I heard around the internet that Firefox on Android does not have Site Isolation built-in yet. After a little bit of research, I learned that Site Isolation on Android was added in Firefox Nightly, appearing to have been added sometime in June 2023. What I can't find, though, is whether this has ever been added to any stable versions of Firefox yet. Does anyone know anything about this?
Update: After further research, it appears that Site Isolation is not currently a feature in stable version of Firefox on Android. I don't know with certainty if their information is up-to-date, but GrapheneOS (A well-known privacy/security-focused fork of Android) does not recommend using Firefox-based browsers on Android due to it's (apparently) lack of a Site Isolation feature. A snippet of what Graphene currently have to say about Firefox on Android/GrapheneOS from their usage guide page, is:
"Avoid Gecko-based browsers like Firefox as they're currently much more vulnerable to exploitation and inherently add a huge amount of attack surface."
On a side-note, they also say about Firefox's current Site Isolation on desktop being weaker, which I wasn't aware of. "Even in the desktop version, Firefox's sandbox is still substantially weaker (especially on Linux) and lacks full support for isolating sites from each other rather than only containing content as a whole."
Both things can be true. Firefox is less secure in the site isolation area, but that's just a backup to the things Firefox is already doing. Firefox is still plenty secure, though it would be quite nice to have this feature.
I use Mull because it takes the best parts of Tor Browser and ships it through F-Droid. For those unaware, it's basically Firefox with additional privacy settings enabled by default, and it syncs just fine with Firefox browsers.
Yes, don't buy into FUD about Firefox being insecure, but also don't misrepresent the value this feature brings. It's not a must-have for me, but I do very much want it.
If site isolation isn't a critical security feature, why would Mozilla implement it and say that it is?
So Firefox for Android not having this feature makes it less secure than browsers that do, at least for this class of attack.
Tor Browser being built on Firefox shouldn't imply that Firefox is more secure than anything else, it means Firefox is closest to its requirements, which are a lot more than security features. The two biggest reasons, from what I can glean, are:
Don't get me wrong, Firefox absolutely is a secure browser (incl. Android), but it is missing certain security features vs Chromium-based browsers. Tor is more interested in privacy and anonymity than security (though security is still a priority), so pointing at them isn't really a valid argument (it's an appeal to authority at best).
Google is really interested in security, and not interested in privacy or anonymity, because being secure gets orgs interested, and orgs have valuable data and users. If your primary concern is security, you'll probably be better off with Chromium browsers, and that seems to be where Micay is coming from. But if privacy and/or anonymity is your goal, Firefox is easier to configure to meet those goals, and it's pretty secure too.
That's why I use Firefox despite being fully aware of Firefox's security limitations. I'm told per site isolation is in progress on Android, so that's pretty cool.
Yes, there are multiple ways to address a given problem, with different tradeoffs. I don't know the specifics of per-site isolation, but I'm guessing it also protects against non-JS attacks like CSS or HTML-processing attacks, which could trigger those same Spectre/Meltdown-style attacks. That's a pretty niche case, but hopefully it shows that even a good plan has potential holes.
Ideally, we could eat our cake and have it too, and hopefully Mozilla is working on that. In the meantime, you need to decide if you want something more configurable (Tor, you, and I seem to prefer this) and accept tradeoffs, or solve for the general case of scripting enabled (e.g. Chromium's isolation). Micay isn't wrong for his preference, and you and I aren't wrong for ours.
That's close to the truth, but it's a system of degrees. You need enough security to make protecting privacy feasible. But they are separate goals, especially if adding Anonymity into the mix. For example:
But there's a lot of overlap too. Really good privacy often requires pretty good security, especially depending on your threat model. Effective anonymity also requires good security and often provides good privacy. So it's not necessarily wrong to say they're extremely closely related, so I could see it being shortened to "no privacy without security" as a general rule of thumb.
I disagree on all accounts:
Instead of attacking them, I think it's better to provide accurate information that they're omitting. If you aggressively attack something, it puts people who like/support that thing on the defensive (relevant Louis Rossmann video, who you should like because he ripped into Daniel Micay as well). Instead, highlight the benefits of your proposed solution, and limit your criticism of other solutions to only those that negatively impact your target audience.
At least that's my takeaway from various sources (laws of power, how to win friends and influence people, etc).
Yup, it's not ready yet on Firefox, hence why I don't use that experimental feature.
Well yeah, Google is an ad company, so they're going to be slow in adopting things that make advertising less effective/gives them less data. I'm guessing they'll implement it once they can effectively use first party cookies to serve ads (would require websites to help).
FPI isn't really a security feature (login cookies and whatnot are first party and thus not sent to third parties), it's a privacy feature. Google doesn't particularly care about privacy, only security.
Again, this seems blatantly false. Nothing GrapheneOS does destroys privacy or anonymity, they just prioritize security.
And they don't control "the privacy community," they just control a few popular, privacy-oriented corners of the web. By its vary nature, you can't control "the privacy community" because the privacy community is all about bucking control. In fact, "privacy community" is kind of an oxy-moron, privacy enthusiasts try to limit talking about themselves. If you pair privacy and anonymity, you'll get discussions about solutions, but people probably won't try to sell you on any one solution.
GrapheneOS is a security-focused OS with strong privacy and anonymity features you can choose to use. Here's their tagline from their webpage:
That's what they deliver, privacy and security, and they do both reasonably well. If you look at their FAQ, private or privacy appears about 60 times, secure or security appears over 100, and anonymous appears once. If you read their documentation, it's clear that their focus is security first, privacy second, and that's about it.
They're not the only game in town, but they do have the most effective marketing. If that gets people interested in security and privacy that otherwise wouldn't, that's a good thing! Like any org, I think they have flaws, but I think they're generally a force for good.
Again, more inaccuracies. The FBI thinks COVID-19 likely came from a lab, so "China virus," while inflammatory, isn't necessarily too far from the truth. I doubt it was intentional, but that explanation seems more likely than the official explanation of "wet market." The US was also likely complicit here since the CDC was likely helping fund "gain of function" research (compare recent Congressional investigations vs the original statements).
Trump is problematic because he's a narcissist that will say anything to get attention, regardless of the truth. But sometimes he says true things, if they benefit him (or he gets lucky; I doubt he researches much).
Why are you making this about you? We were talking about the technical merits of various policies, but you seem to keep bringing up Daniel Micay and yourself. I don't see how either is relevant.
I honestly don't care too much about you (no offense intended) or Daniel Micay, I care about technical merits of apps and hardware. I'm reasonably technical, so I think I can do a decent job judging for myself which products fit what I want, and I recommend them accordingly. I'll often point out if a project has toxic leadership, but a good product is a good product.
So if you want to engage with me, it'll be on a technical level with no personal attacks.
Propaganda can be good or bad depending on your perspective, and a lot of effective marketing could be categorized as propaganda.
Proton, for example, uses propaganda about freedom and privacy in their marketing, yet they're actually selling a suite of services for email, data storage, VPN, etc. That's true for pretty much every privacy-oriented product and service.
I'm not all that interested in deciding what counts as propaganda, I'm interested in the details of products and how effective the marketing is at getting people interested in those products.
They were coooerating together. US labs collaborated with Chinese labs to do research. I don't think it getting out was intentional by any party, but the right heavily implies it to fit their anti-China narrative and the left downplay it to fit their "China isn't so bad" narrative. As is the case most of the time, the truth is probably in the middle.
That is not a litmus test of technical merit, that's a litmus test of how big their ego is. That's irrelevant.
I'm not taking sides because I don't currently have time or energy to look into the issues GrapheneOS and/or Micay may or may not have, but I will say that I don't know how you could think (at least based on the information I referenced from Graphene in my post) that they are saying or implying to people that Firefox is less secure. They did say it was inherently less secure on Android, but not in general. They did say that the Site Isolation feature specifically is less secure even on Desktop, but they didn't say that Firefox as a whole is inherently less secure, just that it currently is on Android. I can see how an average reader may interpret that as Firefox being less secure than Chromium as a whole, but that would simply be their own misinterpretation of what's being said.
and "The moment anyone starts calling Firefox insecure, immediately become alert". Why? Anything is capable of being insecure and Firefox equally so. At any given time, Firefox could have security vulnerabilities (as it does), so it's quite ridiculous to automatically assume that anyone calling Firefox out for being insecure in some way is just Daniel Micay or his "minions"
"Micay and GrapheneOS, and fans/members associated like OP are well known for...". Are you accusing me of being associated with Micay and GrapheneOS, or am I misunderstanding you?
I'm not going to argue with you, because I can see it won't accomplish anything good, so I'll just leave it at this:
No, I did not promote the Chromium monopoly, I simply asked a question, about a security issue with Firefox; this is not the same as promotion. If I wanted to promote the monopoly, this post would have been telling people why they shouldn't use Firefox and I would have posted it on a more broad community about Web Browsers and done so on Reddit for the most impact. I'm against this monopoly, and I intentionally go out of my way to not recommend Chromium-based browsers to people. Discussion about issues with something you love is only healthy, not a promotion of another side.
Reason for deletion: Decided it wasn't worth arguing like my last comment said. The readers are smart enough to see what's stupid about your comment without me having to defend myself.
Update: Oh, you deleted all your comments, good job.