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

Remote Content in Thunderbird - Protected/Proxy Loading?

  • 1 个回答
  • 0 人有此问题
  • 3 次查看
  • 最后回复者为 fred37

more options

As I understand it, Thunderbird does not load many images in emails by default because the external provider of that image would receive the user's IP address.

It seems like some clients, such as outlook.com and gmail.com, just proxy the remote content so the user's IP is only exposed to the proxy provider (Microsoft and Google).

Is there a way to achieve this using Thunderbird? When I check images from my Microsoft or Google accounts, Thunderbird still seems to be retrieving them from their original remote sources. Could it instead obtain them through the email provider directly?

Alternatively, I have a VPN, though I seldom enable it for all traffic. Is it possible to bind remote content loading to a specific network interface?

I am making a feature request for official support (https://connect.mozilla.org/t5/ideas/remote-content-in-thunderbird-protected-proxy-loading/idi-p/65074).

As I understand it, Thunderbird does not load many images in emails by default because the external provider of that image would receive the user's IP address. It seems like some clients, such as outlook.com and gmail.com, just proxy the remote content so the user's IP is only exposed to the proxy provider (Microsoft and Google). Is there a way to achieve this using Thunderbird? When I check images from my Microsoft or Google accounts, Thunderbird still seems to be retrieving them from their original remote sources. Could it instead obtain them through the email provider directly? Alternatively, I have a VPN, though I seldom enable it for all traffic. Is it possible to bind remote content loading to a specific network interface? I am making a feature request for official support (https://connect.mozilla.org/t5/ideas/remote-content-in-thunderbird-protected-proxy-loading/idi-p/65074).

所有回复 (1)

more options

Are you confusing webmail services like gmail.com with Thunderbird, a local client? They are quite different in their security risks.

Loading images by default is very, very dangerous. It could be a virus vector, as there have been security failures in image rendering routines and that has allowed viruses to be installed just be looking at a specially crafted image. More commonly, the images in mail, including spam, are fetched using URLs that tell them that you, specifically you, are reading it, so the know that your email address is good (resellable to other spammers as validated). In any case it's bad for your privacy. So you really should not want to load images without first deciding it's mail you deem safe.

What a web mail program can do is load the image itself and try to figure out if it has tracking included and just display a cleaned-up image at you. But a client can't do that by itself as it's already on your home system.

有帮助吗?

我要提问

您需要登录才能回复。如果您还没账号,可以提出新问题