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Everything posted by msfntor
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360 Extreme Explorer Modified Version
msfntor replied to Humming Owl's topic in Browsers working on Older NT-Family OSes
We have bad news too.. Your screenshot is unreadable because it is too small...- 2,340 replies
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360 Extreme Explorer Modified Version
msfntor replied to Humming Owl's topic in Browsers working on Older NT-Family OSes
and on chase.com this External Domain Request: dpm.demdex.net, with the gift of Demdex tracker... why not The demdex cookie: https://www.pedromonjo.com/2021/09/the-demdex-cookie.html "The original reason for this cookie is to store the unique identifier of the browser in Adobe Audience Manager (AAM)."... "It’s 3 a.m. Do you know what your iPhone is doing? Mine has been alarmingly busy. Even though the screen is off and I’m snoring, apps are beaming out lots of information about me to companies I’ve never heard of. Your iPhone probably is doing the same -- and Apple could be doing more to stop it. On a recent Monday night, a dozen marketing companies, research firms and other personal data guzzlers got reports from my iPhone. At 11:43 p.m., a company called Amplitude learned my phone number, email and exact location. At 3:58 a.m., another called Appboy got a digital fingerprint of my phone. At 6:25 a.m., a tracker called Demdex received a way to identify my phone and sent back a list of other trackers to pair up with. And all night long, there was some startling behavior by a household name: Yelp. It was receiving a message that included my IP address -- once every five minutes. Our data has a secret life in many of the devices we use every day, from talking Alexa speakers to smart TVs. But we've got a giant blind spot when it comes to the data companies probing our phones. You might assume you can count on Apple to sweat all the privacy details. After all, it touted in a recent ad, "What happens on your iPhone stays on your iPhone." My investigation suggests otherwise. IPhone apps I discovered tracking me by passing information to third parties -- just while I was asleep -- include Microsoft OneDrive, Intuit’s Mint, Nike, Spotify, The Washington Post and IBM’s The Weather Channel. One app, the crime-alert service Citizen, shared personally identifiable information in violation of its published privacy policy. And your iPhone doesn't feed data trackers only while you sleep. In a single week, I encountered over 5,400 trackers, mostly in apps, not including the incessant Yelp traffic. According to privacy firm Disconnect, which helped test my iPhone, those unwanted trackers would have spewed out 1.5 gigabytes of data over the span of a month. That's half of an entire basic wireless service plan from AT&T. "This is your data, why should it even leave your phone? Why should it be collected by someone when you don't know what they're going to do with it?" says Patrick Jackson, a former National Security Agency researcher who is chief technology officer for Disconnect. He hooked my iPhone into special software so we could examine the traffic. "I know the value of data, and I don't want mine in any hands where it doesn't need to be." In a world of data brokers, Jackson is the data breaker. He developed an app called Privacy Pro that identifies and blocks many trackers. If you're a little bit techie, I recommend trying the free iOS version to glimpse the secret life of your iPhone. Yes, trackers are a problem on phones running Google's Android, too. Google won't even let Disconnect's tracker-protection software into its Play Store. (Google's rules prohibit apps that might interfere with another app displaying ads.) Part of Jackson's objection to trackers is that many feed the personal data economy, used to target us for marketing and political messaging. Facebook's fiascos have made us all more aware of how our data can be passed along, stolen and misused - but Cambridge Analytica was just the beginning. Jackson's biggest concern is transparency: If we don't know where our data is going, how can we ever hope to keep it private? App trackers are like the cookies on websites that slow load times, waste battery life and cause creepy ads to follow you around the Internet. Except in apps, there's little notice trackers are lurking and you can't choose a different browser to block them. Why do trackers activate in the middle of the night? Some app makers have them call home at times the phone is plugged in, or think they won't interfere with other functions. These late-night encounters happen on the iPhone if you have allowed "background app refresh," which is Apple's default."... - excerpt from oregonlife.com: https://www.oregonlive.com/opinion/2019/05/its-3-am-do-you-know-who-your-iphone-is-talking-to.html- 2,340 replies
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360 Extreme Explorer Modified Version
msfntor replied to Humming Owl's topic in Browsers working on Older NT-Family OSes
PS. Compare to our poor MSFN cookies: 2 (two) only: if I hasJS, and other for Timezone...- 2,340 replies
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360 Extreme Explorer Modified Version
msfntor replied to Humming Owl's topic in Browsers working on Older NT-Family OSes
Hmm... I feel a trap door, it's probably meant to catch me... 18 At least: know that COOKIES are there for our good... 18 cookies for our greatest good, sure... Restart the chase.com page: and still 3 cookies... and still 1... Thanks to Cookie Remover: https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/cookie-remover/kcgpggonjhmeaejebeoeomdlohicfhce?hl=en-US And to know their names, I ask EditCookie: https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/editcookie/eognaopbbjmpompmibmllnddafjhbfdj/related?hl=en-US Yes, it's this unusual abundance of cookies that Mr Chase didn't want us to know... that's why Mr Chase doesn't like browser extensions, surely... Let's have a look at various Chase.com (and JPMorgan.com) findings: JPMorgan.com: Cookies Policy: https://www.jpmorgan.com/cookies "2. What Types of Cookies Do We Use? The main types of cookies we use on our websites are: Strictly Necessary cookies allow the technical operation of our websites or apps (e.g., cookies that enable you to navigate a website or app, and to use its features). Some may also increase the usability of our websites or apps by remembering your choices. You may be able to disable some or all necessary cookies by adjusting your browser settings. If you choose to do so, however, you may experience reduced functionality or be prevented from using our websites or apps altogether. Performance cookies help us enhance the performance and usability of our websites or apps. If you choose not to accept these cookies you may experience less than optimal performance. Analytics cookies help us ensure that we understand our audience as clearly as possible, and that any information that is provided to you is as relevant as possible to your interests and preferences. Marketing cookies help us evaluate the effectiveness of our marketing campaigns or to provide better targeting for marketing. These cookies may collect personal data such as your name as well as information about how you interact with our websites, apps or marketing materials."... ..."To manage your use of cookies there are various resources available to you. For example, the ‘Help’ section on your browser may assist you. You can also disable or delete the stored data used by technology similar to cookies, such as Local Shared Objects or Flash cookies, by managing your browser’s ‘add-on settings’ or visiting the website of its manufacturer."... So listen to webroot.com: "2.Clean house. You don’t have to do it often, but clear your cookie cache every once in a while. There are plusses and minuses here; clearing your cache will wipe away any long-term tracking cookies, but it will also wipe out your saved login information. But don’t let that deter you! Despite that sounding like a hassle, you may find your browser performance improves."...: https://www.webroot.com/blog/2019/10/17/cookies-pixels-and-other-ways-advertisers-are-tracking-you-online/ Excerpt from chase.com Online Privacy Policy: https://www.chase.com/digital/resources/privacy-security/privacy/online-privacy-policy.html "Information we collect Personal Information When you visit or use our online services, we may collect personal information from or about you such as your name, email address, mailing address, telephone number(s), account numbers, limited location information (for example, a zip code to help you find a nearby ATM), user name and password. We may also collect payment card information, social security numbers, driver’s license numbers (or comparable) when you provide such information while using our online services and where we believe it is reasonably required for ordinary business purposes. Usage and Other Information In addition to the personal information described above, we may collect certain information about your use of our online services. For example, we may capture the IP address of the device you use to connect to the online service, the type of operating system and browser you use, and information about the site you came from, the parts of our online service you access, and the site you visit next. We or our third-party partners may also use cookies, web beacons or other technologies to collect and store other information about your visit to, or use of, our online services. In addition, we may later associate the usage and other information we collect online with personal information about you. Chase Mobile For your convenience, Chase offers you the ability to access some of our products and services through mobile applications and mobile-optimized websites (“Chase Mobile”). When you interact with us through Chase Mobile, we may collect information such as unique device identifiers for your mobile device, your screen resolution and other device settings, information about your location, and analytical information about how you use your mobile device. We may ask your permission before collecting certain information (such as precise geo-location information) through Chase Mobile. Additional Sources of Information We may also collect information about you from additional online and offline sources including from co-branded partner sites or commercially available third-party sources, such as credit reporting agencies. We may combine this information with the personal and other information we have collected about you under this Online Privacy Policy."... And jet the chase.com reassures: "Chase will never ask you for confidential information—like your username and password, or other account information—when we reach out to you."...on Security Tips page: https://www.chase.com/personal/security-tips Stunning, 18 cookies for our own good!- 2,340 replies
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If it were me, I would choose to remove all versions with WebGL disabled... no problem for me... And what are the opinions of the other members here? But it's good to disable Google Translate because it's Google... I never use Google to translate, but DeepL Traduction, AND DeepL Write too: https://www.deepl.com/write
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So my recently downloaded is not bad after all... in Fingerprint Spoofing extension I've too allowed WebGL, WebRTC (cause this one is already in my uBlock), font, clientrects; because otherwise I had various problems. So now - no problem with my Fingerprint Spoofing extension. EDIT: I ended up deleting this extension... enough is enough!
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360 Extreme Explorer Modified Version
msfntor replied to Humming Owl's topic in Browsers working on Older NT-Family OSes
PS. What Is a Browser Extension?: https://www.howtogeek.com/718676/what-is-a-browser-extension/- 2,340 replies
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360 Extreme Explorer Modified Version
msfntor replied to Humming Owl's topic in Browsers working on Older NT-Family OSes
... And what exactly does this mean. even? In what way are browser extensions involved when one tries to access "chase.com" ? The sowers of fear say: "Extensions Have Access to Everything in Your Web Browser Have you ever paid attention to the message you see when installing a browser extension in Chrome, for example? For most browser extensions, you’ll see a message stating that the add-on can “Read and change all your data on the websites you visit.” This means that the browser extension has full access to all the web pages you visit. It can see which web pages you’re browsing, read their contents, and watch everything you type. It could even modify the web pages—for example, by inserting extra advertisements. If the extension is malicious, it could gather all that private data of yours—from web browsing activity and the emails you type to your passwords and financial information—and send it to a remote server on the internet. So, when you sign in to your online banking account, your browser extensions are right there with you. They can see your password as you log in and view everything you can see on your online banking account. They could even modify the online banking page before you view it." .... They are the sowers of fear, explicitly: Did You Know Browser Extensions Are Looking at Your Bank Account?: https://www.howtogeek.com/716771/did-you-know-browser-extensions-are-looking-at-your-bank-account/ -so surely chase.com developers read articles like this one above...I think- 2,340 replies
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Virtual humans, artificial intelligence and synthetic reality "In a few minutes we will have 'another' on the computer screen, with our face and voice, emulating our way of speaking and interacting with our contacts." 3/20/2023 More: https://newsrnd.com/news/2023-03-20-virtual-humans--artificial-intelligence-and-synthetic-reality.HkZMRIsHgn.html
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360 Extreme Explorer Modified Version
msfntor replied to Humming Owl's topic in Browsers working on Older NT-Family OSes
Latest Chase's remarks/conditions on browsers and systems: Supported browsers Chrome 95.0 and higher Firefox 98.0 and higher Safari 15.0 and higher Edge 95.0 and higher We don't support: Beta or development browser versions 3rd party browser extensions Required operating systems Windows® operating system: Windows 7 and higher Macintosh® operating system: High Sierra (version 10.13 and higher) Here: https://www.chase.com/digital/resources/privacy-security/security/system-requirements- 2,340 replies
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My Browser Builds (Part 4)
msfntor replied to roytam1's topic in Browsers working on Older NT-Family OSes
CSP TEST - Content Security Policy Browser Test: https://content-security-policy.com/browser-test/ It seems to me that no browser based on Firefox passes this JavaScript Unsafe Hashes Test CSP Level 3 - the result is in red: "CSP Level 3 Inline Hash Not Supported". All our browsers built on Chrome pass this test... -
360 Extreme Explorer Modified Version
msfntor replied to Humming Owl's topic in Browsers working on Older NT-Family OSes
TEST the compatibility of "login-element-gaas ng-star-inserted active": special button with icon, text: "VSTUP NA UCET", blue button at the top-right of the page here: https://www.rb.cz/ It works fine on our builds of 360Chrome v13, v13.5, MiniBrowser. It doesn't work on 360Chrome v12 and DCBrowser... RayeR on vogons.org says, that's new javascript compatibility issue...: https://www.vogons.org/viewtopic.php?f=24&t=12102&start=160- 2,340 replies
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On github.com: Skulltrail192/One-Core-API-Binaries: https://github.com/Skulltrail192/One-Core-API-Binaries Issues ' Skulltrail192/One-Core-API-Binaries: https://github.com/Skulltrail192/One-Core-API-Binaries/issues
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For History: Chrome 101 Windows XP 32 Bit #57: https://github.com/Skulltrail192/One-Core-API-Binaries/issues/57#issuecomment-1133607226 Chrome 109 on Windows XP #156 - Saswat2005 opened this issue Mar 10, 2023: https://github.com/Skulltrail192/One-Core-API-Binaries/issues/156 ... ...
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Oh, poor negative thoughts, compare them to my positive themes! "Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid, do not be discouraged." I will not be discouraged, you cannot be afraid. Be confident. Don't be afraid to be Confident!: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/dont-afraid-confident-dujuan-cherry
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I have downloaded the 5th link from the first page: https://www.dropbox.com/s/l3e5m48tzzb30bj/360ChromePortable_13.5.1030_r8_regular_webgl-enabled_translate-disabled_win-10-skin.zip?dl=1 Renamed file (to download) to: 360Chrome 13.5.1030_r8_r_webgl-e_tr-d_w10-skin Tests: chrome://gpu : WebGL: Software only WebGL2: Software only https://get.webgl.org/ : "Your browser supports WebGL" WebGL Browser Report: https://browserleaks.com/webgl : WebGL Support Detection This browser supports WebGL✔True This browser supports WebGL 2✔True (88 of 88) ...then click on the Escape map link: https://greatescape.co/map?departDate=2023-04-05&returnDate=2023-04-19 : map is here. So NO problems, WebGL works with this build, as expected...
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360 Extreme Explorer Modified Version
msfntor replied to Humming Owl's topic in Browsers working on Older NT-Family OSes
So not ArcticFoxie's builds from MSFN? Why? Have you cleaned your Windows (services, unneeded applications, etc.)? Do you clean your Windows (history, cookies, etc.) with some CCleaner and also manually with the brush and vacuum cleaner?- 2,340 replies
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360 Extreme Explorer Modified Version
msfntor replied to Humming Owl's topic in Browsers working on Older NT-Family OSes
"Yes. Chrome/Chromium support for CSS 3D pre-dates v86 by over a DECADE. Chromium v86 was released 06/10/2020 (day/month/year, I sure as Hades wish there was a universally-accepted date format!). From your screenshot - CSS 3D Transformations first introduced in Chrome: 28/08/2010. Thank you! So what is my problem maps don't work here? MAYBE I'm blocking CSS animations somewhere, but where?- 2,340 replies
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It Sure Seems Like Amazon Is Making a New Web Browser: https://gizmodo.com/amazon-prime-new-web-browser-survey-1850224922 A user survey hints at a new project that aligns with Amazon's lucrative push into advertising as a complement to Prime. By Thomas Germain Published Tuesday 2:26PM Amazon is thinking about releasing a web browser, a boring-sounding project that could have massive implications. The company has sent a survey to users asking detailed questions, including which features would “convince you to download and try” a “new desktop/laptop browser from Amazon.” “We want to understand what our customers value about current web browsers, and what they wish the browsers could do better,” Amazon wrote in the survey, first spotted by Nicholas De Leon of Consumer Reports. “By participating in this survey, you will contribute to innovations that improve browsing experiences for millions of people around the world.”... ...This isn’t Amazon’s first dip into the browser waters, though. Amazon did put out a web browser once, which it called Silk. First launched in 2011, Silk was meant for Amazon’s own products. The company kept working on it, and Silk last made news when it came to the Echo Show in 2018. The survey suggests, however, that Amazon may release a browser for desktops for the first time.... Read more on the link above, please...
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360 Extreme Explorer Modified Version
msfntor replied to Humming Owl's topic in Browsers working on Older NT-Family OSes
@ArcticFoxie, have your builds this CSS3D support coded, please?...- 2,340 replies
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360 Extreme Explorer Modified Version
msfntor replied to Humming Owl's topic in Browsers working on Older NT-Family OSes
Hi @Chuck, have you this api.superguidatv.it allowed in your other security extensions (to to be able to show the images), please? What other security extensions you use, maybe "Domain whitelist"? Search this api inside, and allow... Let's be more precise with the nomenclature: what is this "vanilla browser" you downloaded, isn't it one of the ArcticFoxie forks? EDIT: You wrote too: "Edit: 360ee version that I use and works is 11." - it's this browser you use?... Why not 13 or 13.5? Try... In v12 all images are already here... I don't have v11 to test... But if you mean, that you "just downloaded" your browser, without extensions for the moment, then either you made a mistake in the choosing the fork, or it's the fault of your Windows. PS. Could you specify your OS in your profile settings?...- 2,340 replies