Търсене в помощните статии

Избягвайте измамите при поддръжката. Никога няма да ви помолим да се обадите или изпратите SMS на телефонен номер или да споделите лична информация. Моля, докладвайте подозрителна активност на "Докладване за злоупотреба".

Научете повече

Clear private data on exit - why also explicitly allowed cookies?

  • 3 отговора
  • 1 има този проблем
  • 1 изглед
  • Последен отговор от r.d.f1

more options

"Clear private data on exit" also deletes cookies from explicitly allowed domains. If a domain has been explicitly allowed to set cookies, it would seem logical to not delete its cookies via the "Clear private data on exit" feature. Am I reasoning correctly?

"Clear private data on exit" also deletes cookies from explicitly allowed domains. If a domain has been explicitly allowed to set cookies, it would seem logical to not delete its cookies via the "Clear private data on exit" feature. Am I reasoning correctly?

Избрано решение

Thank you for the nudge, Seburo. Following some regular usage and a double-check, the discovery mentioned above seems to do the trick. But hopefully the way the features work will be made less confusing in the future.

Прочетете този отговор в контекста 👍 0

Всички отговори (3)

more options

I discovered that History management overrides Cookies and Site Data management.

Privacy & Security > History > Clear history when Firefox closes > Settings must not be activated and set to clear Cookies. Let the Cookies and Site Data > "Delete cookies and site data when Firefox is closed" feature do the clearing instead. The allowed list will then be preserved.

For DuckDuckGo, preserving the settings between sessions also requires History management to not automatically delete Site Preferences.

more options

Hi

I think you may have answered your own question..?

If so, please mark it as the solution - this helps other people in the future that have the same question.

more options

Избрано решение

Thank you for the nudge, Seburo. Following some regular usage and a double-check, the discovery mentioned above seems to do the trick. But hopefully the way the features work will be made less confusing in the future.