I would like some kind of timeout on my whitelist, for example that after 6 months from addition the domain would be removed.
Any feature that is planned?
Timeout on whitelist
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zappe
Timeout on whitelist
Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.10; rv:36.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/36.0
Re: Timeout on whitelist
Please no, please no such feature. I don't want to risk losing my whitelist entries which are supposed to be PERMANENT for a reason.
Why would you need auto-culling of whitelist entries anyway? That indicates you may not be understanding something about how to best use NoScript to protect yourself...
Why would you need auto-culling of whitelist entries anyway? That indicates you may not be understanding something about how to best use NoScript to protect yourself...
*Always* check the changelogs BEFORE updating that important software!
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zappe
Re: Timeout on whitelist
Because no site is permanently safe, that could change over time.barbaz wrote:Please no, please no such feature. I don't want to risk losing my whitelist entries which are supposed to be PERMANENT for a reason.
Why would you need auto-culling of whitelist entries anyway? That indicates you may not be understanding something about how to best use NoScript to protect yourself...
So instead of doing a manual review every 6 months I could have it done automatically with such a feature.
Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.10; rv:36.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/36.0
Re: Timeout on whitelist
True, but see FAQ 1.11. The only way this becomes a real concern is if a site on your whitelist changes ownership and the new owner intends to scrap the existing content, or a whitelisted site goes down for a while and the domain gets borrowed by a domain parking service.zappe wrote:Because no site is permanently safe, that could change over time.
The smaller your whitelist is in the first place, and the more carefully you choose the sites you do whitelist, the less likely that is to happen.
Your requested feature wouldn't help there, anyway.
Er.. no.zappe wrote:So instead of doing a manual review every 6 months I could have it done automatically with such a feature.
The only way NoScript knows what's safe or not is by the user telling it.
Because every user will have a different idea of what's safe and what's not, it's impossible to do an automatic review.
*Always* check the changelogs BEFORE updating that important software!
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Re: Timeout on whitelist
This sounds a bit like the argument for password expiry, and has many of the same problems...yes, if you're quite lucky with the timing, you *might* conceivably avoid an attack by doing this, but you might very easily not, too. And you make more work for yourself. The shorter the time period you choose, the better the chance of foiling the (largely theoretical) attack scenario, but the more work you make for yourself, and the more you become accustomed to automatically whitelisting a site even if you thought you'd done it already, which raises its own concerns, eg Unicode lookalikes.
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Thrawn
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Religion is not the opium of the masses. Daily life is the opium of the masses.
True religion, which dares to acknowledge death and challenge the way we live, is an attempt to wake up.
Thrawn
------------
Religion is not the opium of the masses. Daily life is the opium of the masses.
True religion, which dares to acknowledge death and challenge the way we live, is an attempt to wake up.
Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Ubuntu; Linux x86_64; rv:36.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/36.0
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zappe
Re: Timeout on whitelist
You forgot that sites can be hacked. And the longer I use NS the larger my whitelist will be.barbaz wrote:True, but see FAQ 1.11. The only way this becomes a real concern is if a site on your whitelist changes ownership and the new owner intends to scrap the existing content, or a whitelisted site goes down for a while and the domain gets borrowed by a domain parking service.zappe wrote:Because no site is permanently safe, that could change over time.
The smaller your whitelist is in the first place, and the more carefully you choose the sites you do whitelist, the less likely that is to happen.
Your requested feature wouldn't help there, anyway.
Er.. no.zappe wrote:So instead of doing a manual review every 6 months I could have it done automatically with such a feature.
The only way NoScript knows what's safe or not is by the user telling it.
Because every user will have a different idea of what's safe and what's not, it's impossible to do an automatic review.
There's a reason why lists are reviewed after a certain amount of time.
Who said anything about safe?
By automatically review I mean removing sites from the whitelist after a certain period of time.
Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.10; rv:36.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/36.0
Re: Timeout on whitelist
Nope, not forgetting that.zappe wrote:You forgot that sites can be hacked.
https://noscript.net/faq#compromised_trusted
In this case the only viable kind of review is a manual review. For reasons stated above.zappe wrote:And the longer I use NS the larger my whitelist will be.
There's a reason why lists are reviewed after a certain amount of time.
Gak. Automatically reverse hard work that went into making the whitelist just because it was done a long time ago, regardless of whether the site(s) changed? No, definitely no.zappe wrote:Who said anything about safe?
By automatically review I mean removing sites from the whitelist after a certain period of time.
Here's an analogy that might put this in perspective for you: what would you think about automatically resetting any system settings and configurations that were last changed 6 months or more ago because of the risk that some user set setting may have made the OS less secure or less stable? Do you do that on your Mac?
*Always* check the changelogs BEFORE updating that important software!
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Re: Timeout on whitelist
How about automatically closing email accounts after a year, regardless of usage, in case they're abandoned and collecting spam?barbaz wrote:Here's an analogy that might put this in perspective for you: what would you think about automatically resetting any system settings and configurations that were last changed 6 months or more ago because of the risk that some user set setting may have made the OS less secure or less stable? Do you do that on your Mac?
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Thrawn
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Religion is not the opium of the masses. Daily life is the opium of the masses.
True religion, which dares to acknowledge death and challenge the way we live, is an attempt to wake up.
Thrawn
------------
Religion is not the opium of the masses. Daily life is the opium of the masses.
True religion, which dares to acknowledge death and challenge the way we live, is an attempt to wake up.
Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Ubuntu; Linux x86_64; rv:36.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/36.0
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zappe
Re: Timeout on whitelist
99,9% based on what?barbaz wrote:Nope, not forgetting that.zappe wrote:You forgot that sites can be hacked.
https://noscript.net/faq#compromised_trusted
Not really. For example removing sites that I might not use or visit any morebarbaz wrote:In this case the only viable kind of review is a manual review. For reasons stated above.zappe wrote:And the longer I use NS the larger my whitelist will be.
There's a reason why lists are reviewed after a certain amount of time.
[/quote]barbaz wrote:Gak. Automatically reverse hard work that went into making the whitelist just because it was done a long time ago, regardless of whether the site(s) changed? No, definitely no.zappe wrote:Who said anything about safe?
By automatically review I mean removing sites from the whitelist after a certain period of time.
Here's an analogy that might put this in perspective for you: what would you think about automatically resetting any system settings and configurations that were last changed 6 months or more ago because of the risk that some user set setting may have made the OS less secure or less stable? Do you do that on your Mac?
Maybe no for you. This might come as a surprise for you but not everyone work in the same way as you.
That analogy is just irrelevant. You don't whitelist things in your OS in the same way.
The mail analogy is just ridiculous.
Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.10; rv:36.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/36.0
Re: Timeout on whitelist
Based on what actually happens and what is feasible for attackers in the first place. Did you follow the link explaining it?zappe wrote:99,9% based on what?
Hmm.. turning NoScript into trackingware which persists browser history beyond the user clearing it? Don't like that either, even though nothing will be sent to any server...zappe wrote:For example removing sites that I might not use or visit any more
No surprise, I work in a pretty unusual way for a lot of things. Think most computer users follow the advice in my signature?zappe wrote:Maybe no for you. This might come as a surprise for you but not everyone work in the same way as you.
This isn't a matter of "the only logical way to manage a NoScript whitelist is the way barbaz does". Of course there are other ways to manage a whitelist. Let the user do it though, don't have some automated tool doing anything behind the users' backs even on the off chance it coincides with what the user wants. See above for the reasons why that's critical to the security model of NoScript.
No it's not.zappe wrote:That analogy is just irrelevant.
Sure you whitelist things in your OS like that, for example Ubuntu package management has a whitelist of keys that's managed entirely by the user...zappe wrote:You don't whitelist things in your OS in the same way.
No more ridiculous than auto expiring user-set whitelist entries of a security tool...zappe wrote:The mail analogy is just ridiculous.
[EDIT I think I'll leave this thread alone now.]
*Always* check the changelogs BEFORE updating that important software!
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