I have to use certain Microsoft apps for work, so I strictly only use the web versions as I am on Linux. However, just seen this setting pop up in Word while working on a document. I wonder what in specific they would change, considering i am on Firefox. Does anyone know anything about this? Is there an actual good reason for me to allow this, and if did what would it change?
Use a new profile (
firefox -p
) and create a vanilla profile.In your profile folder (
~/.mozilla/firefox/xxxx-default-release/
) you will have a prefs.jsBackup that prefs.js before, apply this office settings BS and backup the prefs.js after.
Using a tool like diff (KDE has a GUI frontent for it) you can see the differences between these files, please report them.
Makes bing your default search engine.
Probably just disable all privacy settings like block crosssite cookies or send do not track request etc.
Just a wild guess: It could be related to the TrustedScriptURL api. I know O365 makes heavy use of it since I’ve seen errors come across the logs referencing it. Problem is, only Chromium browsers offer this API. Neither FF nor Safari implement it.
The new internet explorer.
Every once in a while I wonder what things are like back in the land of Microsoft. That this message doesn’t give the user even the slightest hint about what it wants to do more specifically than “improve your experience” tells me all I need to know.
Makes bing your default search engine.
I ususally just get rid of those popups using custom uBO filters.
Just in general, if any app or platform or website prompts you to allow them access to something out of the blue, and there’s no obvious benefit or reason why you would need that, don’t grant it.
Yeah wasn’t gonna allow it, but crazy that there is no additional information or link to explain further. Most lesser tech savvy / privacy focus people would click this without hesitation, that is what bothers me the most…
Almost like doing this in this way would be part of a lawsuit…
Thank you for your service!
Dont know in this case (which is part of the problem indeed) but sometimes account access is to make the device itself “the second factor” which reduces nag-screens asking for codes or other 2fa time and again.
I believe this allows cross-domain cookie sharing for the current site, meaning office.com can use your cookies from microsoft.com for authentication/preferences/etc.
I know I’m going against the “fuck Microsoft” train of this community, but this is pretty innocuous
Wow, they actually asked this time?
Because they can’t force it on Firefox.