Link post
There’s a myth going around that Firefox blocks analytics providers in its default configuration. For example, in a recent HN discussion 5% of the comments were people asserting it did, and another 5% were people responding to them to assert that it doesn’t. To confirm, it doesn’t:
You can test this yourself:
Open Firefox
If you’ve added any extensions create a fresh profile, so you can test the default configuration
Open Developer Tools
Open the Networking panel
Visit a site with analytics (ex: jefftk.com)
jefftk.com
Observe pings being sent (ex: google-analytics.com/j/collect?...)
google-analytics.com/j/collect?...
Firefox does have an “Enhanced Tracking Protection” mode, but it’s not enabled by default. Additionally, Firefox users are likely disproportionately blocking ads, which also block analytics scripts.
Firefox does not block analytics by default
Link post
There’s a myth going around that Firefox blocks analytics providers in its default configuration. For example, in a recent HN discussion 5% of the comments were people asserting it did, and another 5% were people responding to them to assert that it doesn’t. To confirm, it doesn’t:
You can test this yourself:
Open Firefox
If you’ve added any extensions create a fresh profile, so you can test the default configuration
Open Developer Tools
Open the Networking panel
Visit a site with analytics (ex:
jefftk.com
)Observe pings being sent (ex:
google-analytics.com/j/collect?...
)Firefox does have an “Enhanced Tracking Protection” mode, but it’s not enabled by default. Additionally, Firefox users are likely disproportionately blocking ads, which also block analytics scripts.