搜索 | 用户支持

防范以用户支持为名的诈骗。我们绝对不会要求您拨打电话或发送短信,及提供任何个人信息。请使用“举报滥用”选项报告涉及违规的行为。

详细了解

Why is it even possible for 3rd party programs to change browser settings?

  • 3 个回答
  • 1 人有此问题
  • 8 次查看
  • 最后回复者为 cor-el

more options

A program I recently installed was a malware and changed the search engine, home page and page for new tabs in Firefox and it was a hell to reset. Not even resetting to the default values in about:config worked until the malware was removed. these malwares are very common, including most of the free anti virus programs and a lot of Microsoft programs.

So, why is it even possible for 3rd party programs to change these settings or to install add-ons by themselves. Couldn't the Firefox files be encrypted or protected in some way?

A program I recently installed was a malware and changed the search engine, home page and page for new tabs in Firefox and it was a hell to reset. Not even resetting to the default values in about:config worked until the malware was removed. these malwares are very common, including most of the free anti virus programs and a lot of Microsoft programs. So, why is it even possible for 3rd party programs to change these settings or to install add-ons by themselves. Couldn't the Firefox files be encrypted or protected in some way?

所有回复 (3)

more options

Yes, that would be possible, but it would also affect "legitimate" programs from interacting with Firefox. Mozilla has no way to separate programs that the user installs into "wanted features" and Malware, and specifically block the Malware - it doesn't come "flagged" as such.

If you had been running Malwarebytes or similar, (like Anti-Malware), and those programs were running all the time, it would provide a measure of protection against the hidden Malware installers that are sometimes packaged with seemingly legitimate programs. Anti-Malware programs specifically track garbage like that and prevent it from being installed; much like Anti-Virus programs track and prevent Viruses from getting into a PC.

more options

I know a computer can't distinguish good from evil. However I've never seen a legitimate program trying to change these settings. Couldn't there be a confirm box in Firefox asking if the user wants these settings changed? I don't know if there's already an API these program uses or if they just write to Firefox's files directly.

more options

If you do not keep changes after a restart or otherwise have problems with preferences, see:

You can rename or delete the prefs.js file and possible numbered prefs-##.js files and a possible user.js file to reset all prefs to the default value.