Join us and the lead editor of IRL, Mozilla's multi-award-winning podcast, for a behind-the-scenes look at the pod and to contribute your ideas for the next season, themed: "AI and ME." Mark your calendar and join our Community Call on Wednesday, Aug 7, 17:00–17:45 UTC. See you there!

Cerca nel supporto

Attenzione alle mail truffa. Mozilla non chiederà mai di chiamare o mandare messaggi a un numero di telefono o di inviare dati personali. Segnalare qualsiasi attività sospetta utilizzando l'opzione “Segnala abuso”.

Ulteriori informazioni

Questa discussione è archiviata. Inserire una nuova richiesta se occorre aiuto.

Ran "no-remote" instead of "-no-remote" and homepage was hijacked

  • 2 risposte
  • 1 ha questo problema
  • 10 visualizzazioni
  • Ultima risposta di kobe

more options

I'm running Firefox 26.0 on Ubuntu. I've been messing with profiles and this morning I ran 'firefox -p "default" no-remote' instead of 'firefox -p "default" -no-remote' When I ran the browser with "no-remote", instead of going to my homepage (reuters) I was redirected through a number of nasty spam pages. I panicked and reinstalled a few things, but on running with "-no-remote" my browser loads fine while running "no-remote" continues to send me to spam pages.

I'm still learning with the terminal, what exactly did I do when I ran the command "no-remote"? Is my browser still safe to use?

I'm running Firefox 26.0 on Ubuntu. I've been messing with profiles and this morning I ran 'firefox -p "default" no-remote' instead of 'firefox -p "default" -no-remote' When I ran the browser with "no-remote", instead of going to my homepage (reuters) I was redirected through a number of nasty spam pages. I panicked and reinstalled a few things, but on running with "-no-remote" my browser loads fine while running "no-remote" continues to send me to spam pages. I'm still learning with the terminal, what exactly did I do when I ran the command "no-remote"? Is my browser still safe to use?

Modificato da jspet il

Tutte le risposte (2)

more options

You probably have domain fix-up enabled and the keyword service disabled.

When you start Firefox with something that isn't a startup switch and looks like it could be a web address (e.g., intranet), it will go through the standard name resolution process. If the DNS service returns site not found (404) then either Firefox will submit the query to your current search provider (typically Google) or try the text with www before and com after. In this case, your browser must have requested http://www.no-remote.com/ and gotten a redirect from the server to the site you mentioned.

By design, the search function will take priority, but if it is disabled, then domain guessing will happen. These are the preferences to check in about:config:

  • keyword.enabled (defaults to true)
  • browser.fixup.alternate.enabled (defaults to true)

Does that make sense?

more options

Be VERY careful when doing things in the terminal, it gives you a lot of power.