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Why does Firefox IGNORE my "Offline web content and user data" settings?

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Why does Firefox IGNORE my "Offline web content and user data" settings and allows hotmail.com to secretly store data for offline use? This is deceptive and annoying. I have to clear the "Offline web content and user data" setting every time I log out of hotmail.com

Is there a solution to this or is this by design?

Why does Firefox IGNORE my "Offline web content and user data" settings and allows hotmail.com to secretly store data for offline use? This is deceptive and annoying. I have to clear the "Offline web content and user data" setting every time I log out of hotmail.com Is there a solution to this or is this by design?

Isisombululo esikhethiwe

Firefox will store small amounts (less than 50 MB) of data in the offline (application) cache without asking for permission.

  • offline-apps.allow_by_default;true
  • offline-apps.quota.warn;51200

You can toggle the offline-apps.allow_by_default pref to false to make Firefox ask for permission to store data in the application cache.

You can open the about:config page via the location/address bar. You can accept the warning and click "I'll be careful" to continue.

See also:

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Isisombululo Esikhethiwe

Firefox will store small amounts (less than 50 MB) of data in the offline (application) cache without asking for permission.

  • offline-apps.allow_by_default;true
  • offline-apps.quota.warn;51200

You can toggle the offline-apps.allow_by_default pref to false to make Firefox ask for permission to store data in the application cache.

You can open the about:config page via the location/address bar. You can accept the warning and click "I'll be careful" to continue.

See also:

more options

Thanks, that worked!

Update 1-24-17 Last week I was trying to fix a problem of slow loading on my FF browser and ended up resetting it to "default" mode. If anyone does this remember to reset the about:config offline-apps.allow_by_default; back to "false". Seems like the browser reset process changed the setting back to "true". FYI

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