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mirror of https://github.com/gorhill/uBlock.git synced 2024-11-16 23:42:39 +01:00

Updated Dashboard: Settings (markdown)

Raymond Hill 2017-10-19 09:49:41 -04:00
parent 69987abe2c
commit 9d722ac9a4

@ -72,6 +72,26 @@ Keep in mind that this feature is to prevent **leakage** of your non-internet-fa
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## No CSP reports
You can block network requests made as a result of your browser reporting Content Security Policy violations ("CSP reports") to a remote server (which can be 3rd-party to the site where the violation occurred).
**Important:** disabling CSP reporting is not something which will break web pages, the purpose of CSP reporting is _strictly_ a development tool for web sites.
Consider this excerpt from [Reporting API / Privacy Considerations](http://wicg.github.io/reporting/#privacy) (my emphasis):
> 8.6. Disabling Reporting
>
> [...]
>
> That said, it cant be the case that this general benefit be allowed to take priority over the ability of a user to individually opt-out of such a system. Sending reports costs bandwidth, and potentially could reveal some small amount of additional information above and beyond what a website can obtain in-band ([NETWORK-ERROR-LOGGING], for instance). **User agents MUST allow users to disable reporting with some reasonable amount of granularity in order to maintain the priority of constituencies espoused in [HTML-DESIGN-PRINCIPLES].**
There is currently no way to easily toggle CSP reporting in either Chromium of Firefox. This per-site switch is to address this shortcoming.
Note that as opposed to all other network requests, behind-the-scene network requests which are actual CSP reports will also be filtered out according to `no-csp-reports` switch. So if you globally disable CSP reporting in uBO, this will also apply to behind-the-scene network requests.
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#### Backup/restore section
The bottom-most section is for you to easily backup/restore/reset all settings in uBlock.