Boost Firefox Privacy: Tips for Using Privacy Badger Effectively
What Privacy Badger does
Privacy Badger blocks third-party trackers that follow you across sites by learning which domains appear to track you. It does not use a static blocklist; it observes tracking behavior and blocks or limits scripts and cookies accordingly.
Quick setup
- Install Privacy Badger from Mozilla Add‑ons.
- Pin the extension to Firefox’s toolbar for easy access.
- Allow it a few days to learn tracker behavior during normal browsing.
Recommended settings
- Automatic blocking: Keep the default learning mode enabled so Privacy Badger adapts over time.
- Disable third‑party cookies in Firefox (Settings → Privacy & Security → Enhanced Tracking Protection → Custom) to strengthen blocking.
- Enable HTTPS‑Only Mode (Settings → Privacy & Security → HTTPS‑Only Mode → Enable) to reduce passive tracking over insecure connections.
Daily-use tips
- Check the extension panel: Click the Badger icon to see which domains are blocked or allowed on the current page.
- Manually adjust sliders: Slide a domain to yellow (allow cookies but block scripts) or green (allow) when a site breaks. Prefer yellow over green when possible.
- Use site‑specific allowances: For trusted sites that require third‑party features, allow only the specific domains needed rather than wholesale enabling.
Combining with other protections
- uBlock Origin: Pairing Privacy Badger with a lightweight content blocker (uBlock Origin) covers additional ad and script patterns while Badger focuses on behavioral trackers.
- Disable fingerprinting: Use Firefox’s built‑in resist fingerprinting (Settings → Privacy & Security → Enhanced Tracking Protection → Strict) or a dedicated extension if you need stronger anti‑fingerprinting.
- Container Tabs: Use Firefox Multi‑Account Containers to isolate logins and reduce cross‑site tracking.
Troubleshooting common issues
- Site breaks after blocking: open Privacy Badger panel → move problematic domain to yellow or green.
- Video streaming or logins fail: temporarily allow relevant domains; then revert when done.
- Extension not learning: ensure it’s active and not blocked by other extensions or privacy settings; try disabling conflicting add‑ons.
Maintenance
- Periodically review allowed domains in the Privacy Badger settings and revoke allowances you no longer need.
- Keep Firefox and Privacy Badger up to date for best compatibility and security.
Minimal privacy tradeoffs
Allowing a domain restores some functionality but increases exposure; prefer the least permissive setting that keeps the site usable.
If you want, I can produce step‑by‑step screenshots for installation and adjusting sliders.
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