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!

Fungování této stránky je z důvodu údržby dočasně omezeno. Pokud žádný článek nápovědy nevyřeší váš problém a potřebujete se zeptat na další řešení, napište nám na Twitter @FirefoxSupport nebo Reddit /r/firefox.

Prohledat stránky podpory

Vyhněte se podvodům. Za účelem poskytnutí podpory vás nikdy nežádáme, abyste zavolali nebo poslali SMS na nějaké telefonní číslo nebo abyste sdělili své osobní údaje. Jakékoliv podezřelé chování nám prosím nahlaste pomocí odkazu „Nahlásit zneužití“.

Zjistit více

Always apply Do Not Track is selected but PANOPTICLICK shows that Do Not Track is off. How do I fix this?

more options

When I test my browser on https://panopticlick.eff.org the results show that the browser is *not* accepting Do Not Track commitments. I tried this using a regular window and privacy window. I don't why that is since under Options>Privacy>manage your Do Not Track settings, I have "Always apply Do Not Track" checked.

PANOPTICLICK is able to see my other privacy settings on my browser, however. I'm assuming their test results are correct.

Please, help me resolve this.

When I test my browser on https://panopticlick.eff.org the results show that the browser is *not* accepting Do Not Track commitments. I tried this using a regular window and privacy window. I don't why that is since under Options>Privacy>manage your Do Not Track settings, I have "Always apply Do Not Track" checked. PANOPTICLICK is able to see my other privacy settings on my browser, however. I'm assuming their test results are correct. Please, help me resolve this.

Všechny odpovědi (2)

more options

Note that the DNT setting that Firefox uses is under the fingerprint details (DNT Header Enabled?). Do not get confused by the item about a website that promises to honor DNT that shows at the top. Firefox always sends a DNT header when enabled.

See also:

more options

I'm not sure what that means, that Firefox would "accept" a "commitment" from the site to honor Do Not Track. The commitment page appears to be a text file or HTML document. Would you want Firefox to display it or try to interpret its meaning? This seems like maybe a feature for future consideration rather than something critical now when most sites don't even pay attention to the Do Not Track signal.