tlu wrote:Tom T. wrote:But if Apply to whitelisted *is* checked, does the Fx permission override NS?
If so, then there's an impossible situation: You can't have selective allow *at all*. (again, using YT as an example).
If this option IS checked in Noscript then the "normal" Noscript placeholder is displayed, if it is NOT checked then the CTP placeholder is displayed.
So, you're saying that if you *do* enable CTP *and* lock down Embeddings (checking everything on the page), there is no redundant clicking: Clicking the NS placeholder at a YT video will let it play, and Fx will honor NS's choice -- meaning that NS overrides Fx here?
And the site (YT or whoever) is *not* thereby automatically whitelisted in Fx CTP? -- which would be the ideal situation IMHO.
tlu wrote:Tom T. wrote:tlu wrote: In other words: CTP takes precedence over the Noscript settings.
Again, I hope only in deny, and not in allow. Could you please clarify?
... If you use CTP in FF14, checking that NS option is not recommended, IMHO, as CTP offers the same functionality (it's just another placeholder) while offering more flexibility at the same time (as you can define permanent permissions for specific sites). That's how I see it.
I'm afraid I don't. NS gives me *video-specific* (single-ID-object-specific) control and permission. Which is much more finely-grained than site-specific.
I don't want to allow *all* YT vids. I wish to allow only the one I want to play at the moment. Reading your link, that is not possible, and apparently not coming soon, from Fx CTP.
tlu wrote:Tom T. wrote:Plugin-specific isn't much better. YouTube isn't trying to run Java on my machine.
I think it is much better. If I need Java only on one or two (trustworthy) sites but not on others (although it's embedded in them), it is definitely an improvement security-wise.
Well, yes, I agree, but I wasn't thinking at the time that the first generation CTP allowed "all" plugins at the w/l site, because that seemed almost useless, and kind of dumb. Imagine a site that tried to load both Flash and Silverlight -- and maybe Java.
So per-plugin should have been Step 1, IMHO. But yes, plugin-specific is a big improvement by comparison.
Per-object-specific is what's needed. IMHO. YMMV.
Perhaps that will come at a later stage. Although I'm not sure how this can be easily done for sites like YT.
NoScript manages to do it...
They could include NS as a default, with an opt-in first-run splash screen. Which is no different from making CTP opt-in for the new user.
(Is Fx reinventing the wheel here, little by little?

)
tlu wrote:CTP is an important step towards more security but if Mozilla made it too complicated, most users would refuse to use it.
Understood, and for the non-tech user who won't even try NS, agree that it's a step in the right direction.
Perhaps if CTP gets users accustomed to the concept of specific permission, then the transition to full-on NoScript protection (add-on or default install with opt-in) would be much easier.
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