Why is Firefox still storing user data when I've done "Forget about this site"?
I selectively delete data on sites by doing Show All History, finding a row for the site I want to remove, and then doing Right Click -> "Forget About This Site". I do this rather than globally forget all data because there are a few site logins I want to retain.
I just did this with every row in the History - This Month tab. It's now empty.
However, when I type a single letter (e.g. "a") into the search box a huge list of URLs appears, many of them from this month. They include a number of sites, like my on-line banking, that I previously believed I had erased all trace of.
1) Why are these URLs not shown in my history except when a search term is entered?
2) Why does "Forget About This Site" not clear EVERYTHING for the site in question?
For info, I'm running FF 61.01.1 for Linux Mint.
All Replies (7)
What you are seeing is not your history, but the address bar history.
Type about:preferences#privacy<enter> in the address bar. The button next to History, select Use Custom Settings.
Turn on Remember My Browsing And Download History At the bottom of the page, turn on Clear History When Firefox Closes. At the far right, press the Settings button. Turn on ONLY Cache and Form And Search History leaving the others off.
piersdelavison said
... the History - This Month tab. It's now empty.
However, when I type a single letter (e.g. "a") into the search box a huge list of URLs appears, many of them from this month. They include a number of sites, like my on-line banking, that I previously believed I had erased all trace of.
1) Why are these URLs not shown in my history except when a search term is entered?
2) Why does "Forget About This Site" not clear EVERYTHING for the site in question?
Comment:
The drop-down also shows bookmarked sites by default; these are indicated with a star icon.
Question:
If you search in the Library window ("Show All History") by typing a in the search box at the upper left, do the sites you saw in the address bar autocomplete drop-down also show up there?
- The order may well be different.
- Search reaches across time and doesn't follow the currently selected category in the left column.
Regarding "Forget About This Site":
This should truly clear all history for a site, as well as deleting bookmarks, cookies, permissions, default zoom level, and other data for the site. I haven't heard of that one failing before.
Novain'i jscher2000 - Support Volunteer t@
FredMcD said
What you are seeing is not your history, but the address bar history. Type about:preferences#privacy<enter> in the address bar. The button next to History, select Use Custom Settings. Turn on Remember My Browsing And Download History At the bottom of the page, turn on Clear History When Firefox Closes. At the far right, press the Settings button. Turn on ONLY Cache and Form And Search History leaving the others off.
Hello,
Thanks for the suggestion. I had all of this set as you've described, except for ticking 'Form and Search History' as well as 'Cache'. I'll try this and see what happens.
Piers.
jscher2000 said
piersdelavison said... the History - This Month tab. It's now empty.
However, when I type a single letter (e.g. "a") into the search box a huge list of URLs appears, many of them from this month. They include a number of sites, like my on-line banking, that I previously believed I had erased all trace of.
1) Why are these URLs not shown in my history except when a search term is entered?
2) Why does "Forget About This Site" not clear EVERYTHING for the site in question?Comment:
The drop-down also shows bookmarked sites by default; these are indicated with a star icon.
Question:
If you search in the Library window ("Show All History") by typing a in the search box at the upper left, do the sites you saw in the address bar autocomplete drop-down also show up there?
- The order may well be different.
- Search reaches across time and doesn't follow the currently selected category in the left column.
Regarding "Forget About This Site":
This should truly clear all history for a site, as well as deleting bookmarks, cookies, permissions, default zoom level, and other data for the site. I haven't heard of that one failing before.
Hello,
I'm accessing my history by going to the History menu, and selecting 'Show all history', equivalent to ctrl-shift-H, which opens the history in a new window. The menu dropdown (before selecting 'Show All History') has the last 15 sites at the bottom of it, but that's not what I'm looking at.
Having opened the full window I'm highlighting 'History' at the top of the left hand column, not 'Downloads', 'Tags' or 'All Bookmarks'.
The search box (top right, not top left) says 'Search History' in it before I've typed anything. If I highlight 'All Bookmarks' instead it says 'Search Bookmarks'.
I am not searching in the autocomplete box in the main bar, the one that says 'Search or enter address'.
When in the Full History window, as I said, I right click and select 'Forget about this site', but this does NOT effect my stored bookmarks at all (I've tested that).
If I look in the autocomplete address box pulldown (which I never normally use) there are a small number of sites (5 of them) in it, and they do appear in amongst the search history, but they are only a small fraction of the total.
Thanks,
Piers.
Hi Piers, I don't know why "Forget about this site" works differently on your Firefox.
Do you install Firefox directly from Mozilla or via Mint and its repository? (Just in case there is some difference there.)
jscher2000 said
Hi Piers, I don't know why "Forget about this site" works differently on your Firefox. Do you install Firefox directly from Mozilla or via Mint and its repository? (Just in case there is some difference there.)
It's installed from the Mint repository.
I'd be surprised though if something as specific as this were to differ between the Linux and Windows / Mac versions...
Bookmarks are the only thing that isn't affected by "Forget About This Site", so you need to handle this yourself. Passwords are included unless you use a master password and aren't logged in to the software security device (i.e. you get a MP prompt when you click Show logins). Fred might remember that he once asked me about this bookmarks exception.
Using "Forget About This Site" will remove all data stored in Firefox from this domain like history and cookies and passwords and exceptions and cache (bookmarks are excluded), so be cautious. If you have a password or other data from that domain that you do not want to lose then make sure to backup this data or make a note.
You can't recover from this 'forget' unless you have a backup of involved files.
If you revisit a 'forgotten' website then data from that website will be saved once again.