There is something in Firefox that prevents the extension from working. The app detects that it is added to firefox but can’t really get more details.so far in firefox McAfee's web advisor is installed, I tried a few test url, has not reacted to anything and seems grayed out although the app says firefox is protected. is this normal behavior?
Exactly, and this creates a strong duo, first of all, the product is double verified. Secondly, all features and corners are scrutinised in great detail. The theory and the practice (how well it all works) are all put to the test and explained.I appreciate reading this kind of review from a fellow tester
As for McAfee, it's made good progress and is taking the same path as Norton (before meeting Avast! to make Gen Digital).
=> For the haters who want to make dramas in the mode “Ouin Ouin Ouin he's copying Shadowra” or “Ouin Ouin Shadowra is better”, know that I prefer to have that honestly, it makes a nice complement to my videos, and we're not targeting the same thing.
I test aggressively, @Trident clearly goes to the study![]()
yes, I did hit the button "enable all permissions" and McAfee app says firefox is protected. PS when I installed the ext into firefox I also got McAfee popup to run their vpn, I did not. But I am currently running another vpn. I've been wondering if the non-McAfee vpn affects its webadvisor ext...??There is something in Firefox that prevents the extension from working. The app detects that it is added to firefox but can’t really get more details.
Did you enable all permissions?
I don’t think VPN would affect it.yes, I did hit the button "enable all permissions" and McAfee app says firefox is protected. PS when I installed the ext into firefox I also got McAfee popup to run their vpn, I did not. But I am currently running another vpn. I've been wondering if the non-McAfee vpn affects its webadvisor ext...??
it seems totally dead despite McAfee app saying firefox is protected. I tested a few things and turned it off and then removed it. I can try putting it back at midnight. Things just work better for me then. Normally Cyberlock does not interfere with browser extensions, but maybe it blocked something without telling me when I installed the ext. just wondering.I don’t think VPN would affect it.
Do you see search results indicators?
Here in my firefox it works.
good to know, I have never gotten an enable all permissions before. And on the add-on page there was also a button I had not seen before giving permission to work on firefox / mozilla restricted pages, which was set to "Don't" so I allowed that one too and still WebAdvisor was dead. I'll try again later tonight. thanks!@simmerskool BTW, the extra prompt of giving McAfee permission on Firefox is a mandatory requirement forced by Firefox. It's not McAfee related. Firefox enforced this a couple of years ago. Similar thing is shown for every other extension of that nature.
BTW, this is a link that can be used to install McAfee site advisor on any Firefox even without installing McAfee AV.
After "playing" some more with WebAdvisor ext in firefox, my best guess is that the first time I was presented with the extension on firefox, I decided not to share my personal data, and uninstalled the extension. I think it left some deep setting in registry or somewhere because when I reinstalled ext, it continues to stay / or play "dead" -- I had disabled a few things that I thought might have blocked a successful install, but no effect. I saw that some folks uninstall firefox and reinstall it, but it's just not that critical to me.@simmerskool BTW, the extra prompt of giving McAfee permission on Firefox is a mandatory requirement forced by Firefox. It's not McAfee related. Firefox enforced this a couple of years ago. Similar thing is shown for every other extension of that nature.
BTW, this is a link that can be used to install McAfee site advisor on any Firefox even without installing McAfee AV.
artosetrov.com
@Nightwalker & @Trident can y'all clarify scam feature for me. IIRC when I install McAfee Essential scam protection was a feature I initially skipped as it seemed like McAfee wanted my inbox login credentials (I may have misunderstood?) -- I am not running an email client. I use browser interface for email. I Just skimmed McAfee's scam info pages & still not entirely clear to me.It seems that McAfee’s Scam Detector still only works for customers in the U.S., UK, and Australia, what a shame, it was the most fascinating feature for me.
I hope that they make a global rollout soon.
Source: https://www.mcafee.com/blogs/mcafee-news/introducing-mcafees-scam-detector-now-included-in-all-core-plans/#:~:text=And because scam protection is,no need for additional purchases.
McAfee automatically scans all emails that pass the spam filter and moves “scam” to another folder called McAfee Alert. The details why the email was flagged are available online, on protection.mcafee.com@Nightwalker & @Trident can y'all clarify scam feature for me. IIRC when I install McAfee Essential scam protection was a feature I initially skipped as it seemed like McAfee wanted my inbox login credentials (I may have misunderstood?) -- I am not running an email client. I use browser interface for email. I Just skimmed McAfee's scam info pages & still not entirely clear to me.
"AI-based scam analysis for email flags phishing and other suspicious emails across Gmail, Outlook, and Yahoo. Adds a “McAfee Alert” label and explains why an email was flagged"
If I'm reading email in a browser (not one of those 3 mentioned) does / can McAfee scam scan it and flag the email (or inbox) &/or can I manually tell it to scan a particular email? ((Bitdefender has scamio website you can paste email into and get a verdict)) McAfee specifically mentioned Gmail,
one last question (McAfee automatically scans all emails that pass the spam filter and moves “scam” to another folder called McAfee Alert. The details why the email was flagged are available online, on protection.mcafee.com
It doesn’t matter how you use your emails (through browser, on a phone/tablet, through Outlook for Windows and so on).
The Scam protection features also include SMS scanning, every message content and links are checked when mobile security is installed.
And last but not least, in mobile security there is the same type of chatbot to paste the content and check it.
DeepFake detection is also part of the Anti Scam.
This requires data too.
The service needs data.
There is the option to not allow access to the data and not use the service.
McAfee needs to access emails and messages to scan them.
Because only GMail, Yahoo and Outlook provide the necessary applicable program interface that McAfee can step on, to provide the scanning.one last question () is allow "access to data" giving them email address, login, pw (2fa) carte blanche, or can I tell it to read this email -- raw email...) sorry if this Q is totally obvious to you -- I mean it as a serious question. (& why their reference to only Gmail, Outlook & Yahoo).