I'm still trying to wrap my mind around the red and green locks. As one who is new to NS ver 10, it seems as though the green lock limits scripting to those sites that use the HTTPS protocol, and the red lock doesn't limit anything at all. I keep thinking that the red color would indicate more restriction than the green color.
After all, a red traffic light means STOP, and a green light means it's okay to GO. So yesterday I went merrily on my way, giving green locks to every URL in my Trusted list that had a HTTPS at the start, and red locks to those that didn't. Now, after reading more in the Hackademix.net writeups, it appears that all I did was open myself up to more danger by giving the red locks out.
I guess my question here is, did I screw up (again)?
Red Lock, Green Lock, I Still Don't Quite Understand
Red Lock, Green Lock, I Still Don't Quite Understand
* HP Pavilion Desktop 510-p114
* Windows 10 Home 22H2 19045.3208
* Firefox 115.0.2 Thunderbird 112.13.0
* Windows 10 Home 22H2 19045.3208
* Firefox 115.0.2 Thunderbird 112.13.0
Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64; rv:57.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/57.0
Re: Red Lock, Green Lock, I Still Don't Quite Understand
I guess you could also see the Red light/Lock as dangerous and the Green Light(Lock as safer. So, we are safer when we allow green and somewhat more dangerous when allowing red.Skeezix wrote:I keep thinking that the red color would indicate more restriction than the green color.
After all, a red traffic light means STOP, and a green light means it's okay to GO.
I think you did good. In my case, I keep an small list of Trusted domains. If the site works with green and red is not required, I allow/Trust green. If the site requires red, then I allow/Trust red. I allow Red only if the site dont work with green. The NoScript menu makes it easy to figure out what color you need to allow by looking at the color of the domain, black or red.Skeezix wrote:So yesterday I went merrily on my way, giving green locks to every URL in my Trusted list that had a HTTPS at the start, and red locks to those that didn't. Now, after reading more in the Hackademix.net writeups, it appears that all I did was open myself up to more danger by giving the red locks out.
I guess my question here is, did I screw up (again)?
Bo
Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; WOW64; rv:57.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/57.0
Re: Red Lock, Green Lock, I Still Don't Quite Understand
Thank you for replying. I'll change my red locks to green ones because I believe the green lock is more restrictive than a red lock.
I think.
I think.
* HP Pavilion Desktop 510-p114
* Windows 10 Home 22H2 19045.3208
* Firefox 115.0.2 Thunderbird 112.13.0
* Windows 10 Home 22H2 19045.3208
* Firefox 115.0.2 Thunderbird 112.13.0
Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64; rv:57.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/57.0