Join the AMA (Ask Me Anything) with the Firefox leadership team to celebrate Firefox 20th anniversary and discuss Firefox’s future on Mozilla Connect. Mark your calendar on Thursday, November 14, 18:00 - 20:00 UTC!

Hilfe durchsuchen

Vorsicht vor Support-Betrug: Wir fordern Sie niemals auf, eine Telefonnummer anzurufen, eine SMS an eine Telefonnummer zu senden oder persönliche Daten preiszugeben. Bitte melden Sie verdächtige Aktivitäten über die Funktion „Missbrauch melden“.

Weitere Informationen

Recent Firefox upgrade to cloak IP address now causes me to 2-factor authenticate on trusted sites

more options

At my workplace, if I am logged into my workplace network, I am supposed to be able to bypass the multi-factor authentication step when visiting secure workplace sites. However, after a recent update of Firefox (several weeks ago), I am asked to multi-factor authenticate at those sites even when I'm logged into my workplace network. (This is not the case in other browsers.) I suspect the change is related to a new security setting that cloaks my IP address. How can I tell Firefox NOT to cloak my IP address when accessing certain sites? I tried turning off the tracker but that didn't work.

At my workplace, if I am logged into my workplace network, I am supposed to be able to bypass the multi-factor authentication step when visiting secure workplace sites. However, after a recent update of Firefox (several weeks ago), I am asked to multi-factor authenticate at those sites even when I'm logged into my workplace network. (This is not the case in other browsers.) I suspect the change is related to a new security setting that cloaks my IP address. How can I tell Firefox NOT to cloak my IP address when accessing certain sites? I tried turning off the tracker but that didn't work.

Alle Antworten (2)

more options

Firefox does not do anything to hide your IP address. That would be what a VPN does, which is separate from the Firefox browser.

This sounds like maybe it's something to do with Enhanced Tracking Protection (ETP) in Firefox. That feature can sometimes block certain cookies from being saved in Firefox, which can cause this type of issue.

You may want to try adjusting some of the ETP settings to see if disabling it or lowering how strict its rules are will help.

more options

You might also check whether DNS over HTTPS is enabled in case your servers have both internal and external DNS entries: Firefox DNS-over-HTTPS.