Этот сайт имеет ограниченную функциональность, пока мы проводим техническое обслуживание для улучшения его работы. Если какая-либо статья не решила вашу проблему и вы хотите задать вопрос, наше сообщество поддержки ждёт вас: @FirefoxSupport в Твиттере и /r/firefox на Reddit.

Поиск в Поддержке

Избегайте мошенников, выдающих себя за службу поддержки. Мы никогда не попросим вас позвонить, отправить текстовое сообщение или поделиться личной информацией. Сообщайте о подозрительной активности, используя функцию «Пожаловаться».

Подробнее

How to allow a specific third party cookie on one website?

  • 7 ответов
  • 1 имеет эту проблему
  • 1 просмотр
  • Последний ответ от cor-el

more options

I website I subscribe to uses a third party company to manage logins, and I am logged out every time I leave the website because I do not have third party cookies available. How do I go about allowing cookies for one third party website on one specific site?

For example, I subscribe and need to log in to abc.com. That website uses xzy.com to manage their logins. I need to enable cookies for xyz.com only for abc.com.

I website I subscribe to uses a third party company to manage logins, and I am logged out every time I leave the website because I do not have third party cookies available. How do I go about allowing cookies for one third party website on one specific site? For example, I subscribe and need to log in to abc.com. That website uses xzy.com to manage their logins. I need to enable cookies for xyz.com only for abc.com.

Все ответы (7)

more options

They have to provide it for the Browser to register the cookie if they don't make it available then the Browser will not have it.

more options

The website provides the cookie when I visit it, but I don't want to allow cookies for that entire website everywhere. I want to allow one cookie only on that website, not any website.

more options

You can create a cookie allow exception for each involved domain to keep cookies for specific third-party domains. You need to include the proper protocol (http:// or https://) when you create the exception.

  • Options/Preferences -> Privacy & Security
    Cookies and Site Data -> Exceptions

In case you use "Clear history when Firefox closes" or otherwise clear history.

  • do not clear the Cookies
  • do not clear the Site Preferences
  • clearing "Site Preferences" clears exceptions for cookies, images, pop-up windows, and software installation and exception for password and other website specific data
  • clearing "Cookies" will remove all selected cookies including cookies with an "Allow" exception you may want to keep
more options

I can see the option to create an exception, but I only want that exception for one specific domain. I don't see how I can create that. For example, I would want Twitter to be able to use cookies on its site so that I don't have to log in every time, but I don't want Twitter to have cookies anywhere else.

Where is the option to specify the domain that an exception is applicable to?

more options

For what Twitter domain(s) would you require this cookie exception?

If this is for a specific Twitter sub domain then it not very likely that this sub domain is used outside Twitter.

more options

Twitter was probably not the best example I could use. I subscribe to a local news site that uses a third party to manage their log ins and accounts. I only want that third party to be able to use cookies on that local news site, as I'd rather not give blanket access.

more options

You would still have to decide if you want to create an allow exception and have the website remember you.