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Netcraft Anti-Phishing Extension for Firefox Updated - Adds protection against malicious JavaScript
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<blockquote data-quote="ebocious" data-source="post: 838344" data-attributes="member: 75834"><p>It may seem contradictory that a default-deny proponent such as myself would be disinterested in a default-deny script blocker for the browser, but there it is. While I only install new apps and updates once or twice a week, I probably surf a couple hundred websites in a day. NoScript is a no-no for me.</p><p></p><p>Malwarebytes Browser Guard may be a bit heavy on resources and prone to false positives, but it doesn't grind my surfing to a halt. I think I have decent coverage between MBBG, TrafficLight, and Windows Defender Browser Protection for dealing with zero-day threats. Anything that gets through them and the sandbox then has to deal with AppGuard or Cruel Comodo (except on the Macs, which are hardened and protected with a few apps from Objective-See).</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ebocious, post: 838344, member: 75834"] It may seem contradictory that a default-deny proponent such as myself would be disinterested in a default-deny script blocker for the browser, but there it is. While I only install new apps and updates once or twice a week, I probably surf a couple hundred websites in a day. NoScript is a no-no for me. Malwarebytes Browser Guard may be a bit heavy on resources and prone to false positives, but it doesn't grind my surfing to a halt. I think I have decent coverage between MBBG, TrafficLight, and Windows Defender Browser Protection for dealing with zero-day threats. Anything that gets through them and the sandbox then has to deal with AppGuard or Cruel Comodo (except on the Macs, which are hardened and protected with a few apps from Objective-See). [/QUOTE]
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