Fungovanie tejto stránky je z dôvodu údržby dočasne obmedzené. Ak článok nevyrieši váš problém a chcete položiť otázku, napíšte našej komunite podpory na Twitter @FirefoxSupport alebo Reddit /r/firefox.

Vyhľadajte odpoveď

Vyhnite sa podvodom s podporou. Nikdy vás nebudeme žiadať, aby ste zavolali alebo poslali SMS na telefónne číslo alebo zdieľali osobné informácie. Nahláste prosím podozrivú aktivitu použitím voľby “Nahlásiť zneužitie”.

Ďalšie informácie

"Your browser is being managed by your organization." I do not have an "organization"

  • 1 odpoveď
  • 1 má tento problém
  • 1 zobrazenie
  • Posledná odpoveď od TyDraniu

more options

Hi. I just switched over to Linux Mint Cinnamon 20.3 And Linux uses Firefox as the default browser. No problem there, as I have been a "foxer" since 2012. But now i can not use bookmarks, or change certain settings. My settings page says "Your browser is being managed by your organization."

Why? I do not have an organization. This is fresh, clean Linux Mint install and I currently have no anti-virus programs. (AV's were suggested as the cause in other posts)

Hi. I just switched over to Linux Mint Cinnamon 20.3 And Linux uses Firefox as the default browser. No problem there, as I have been a "foxer" since 2012. But now i can not use bookmarks, or change certain settings. My settings page says "Your browser is being managed by your organization." Why? I do not have an organization. This is fresh, clean Linux Mint install and I currently have no anti-virus programs. (AV's were suggested as the cause in other posts)

Všetky odpovede (1)

more options

Please read https://blog.linuxmint.com/?p=4259

Firefox cannot handle its own updates. It doesn’t know how to check the repositories and doesn’t have admin privileges anyway. In Linux Mint this is the job of the Update Manager so Firefox is told not to handle updates. In the past, this was done via code changes. We (mint devs) patched Firefox not to do it and not to show any warning about it. This is how it is in Debian and Ubuntu as well. With this transition this is done via a policy file, i.e. via system-wide configuration. Firefox shows the following messages in the preferences and in the about dialog as a result: Your browser is being managed by your administration Updates disabled by system administrator These messages can be quite confusing, especially the first one. Please ignore them for now. We’ll be reporting the issue to get it fixed upstream.