top button
Flag Notify
    Connect to us
      Site Registration

Site Registration

Firefox is slow and reason is trackers & ghostery

0 votes
482 views

In the past I used to think why Firefox can be slow when it's loading pages. Now I've found something that makes a noticeable difference: the addon "ghostery" that blocks "trackers," which their website defines as
page elements - scripts, pixels, iframes, etc. - that are normally invisible to the user. What "trackers" seem to be all about is marketing, and apparently they've been wasting a lot of my time.
http://www.ghostery.com

What's especially interesting to me is a list that shows the trackers that have been blocked for each website I visit. For example, the intro page for cnn.com includes 20 such unwanted visitors with names like "Audience Science," "Dynamic Science," and "Scorecard Research."

posted Jul 14, 2013 by anonymous

Share this question
Facebook Share Button Twitter Share Button LinkedIn Share Button
Just to say +1 for ghostery!
Since the prism revelations I am 'trying' to prevent the general  scooping of data, to at least make em work for it!

1 Answer

0 votes

I just installed it, and it seems to work, but who is it sending data back to? Just asking, but I always have the TANSTAAFL principle in mind.

answer Jul 14, 2013 by anonymous
Similar Questions
+1 vote

It can take as long as 20 seconds to scroll the screen, which tends to scroll in large jumps, even when smooth scroll is enabled. The problem is worse when smooth scrolling is enabled, but is bad enough even when it is not.

Other applications seem to have scrolling slowed somewhat when Firefox has many windows open. It looks to me like a memory swapping issue, but I have no evidence beyond my gut. Right now Firefox has 30 tabs open on all its windows. Performance is bad, though not intolerable.

0 votes

Hi,

In my application, we are using material design with a lot of gradients effects. It's working in windows firefox whereas in centos firefox not working properly. Any suggestion, please ?

0 votes

I observed a lot of crashes with firefox 21 for example just going to www.thesaurus.com
I also use ABP to block the AD, but it does not seem to be the problem.

+1 vote

I've copied some files from the firefox cache. According to file, they are Macromedia Flash data (compressed), version 9. How do I play them locally?
I saw them from a remote site through firefox, but I cannot seem to play them locally. neither mplayer nor vlc seems to work. Pointing firefox at them didn't work either.
Any ideas?

+4 votes

On CentOS, top shows per process memory using in kb or mb. On Fedora 19, top shows per process memory usage by the byte. Is there an option or setting to make Fedora's top (from procps-ng) work like CentOS' (from procps).

...