The Mozilla Foundation has announced its release Firefox Monitor. It's a free service that's been in testing since the summer and lets Firefox users (and more) know if they've been leaked data them on the internet.
Firefox Monitor is the product of a pluswork με τον Troy Hunt, τον δημιουργό του ‘Have I Been Pwned,' and to work it uses the site's API.
The way the "new" service works will be familiar to anyone who has used the Troy Hunt website, Have I Been Pwned. Users simply enter their email addresses into Firefox Monitor and the new service will search for email with a list of existing data breaches. In case he discovers something he will inform the interested party about whether his data is circulating on the internet.
The purpose of Firefox Monitor is to allow users to respond to data breaches in a timely manner, giving them the opportunity to take proactive measures to stop further surprises, with a change of passwords but also the activation of two-factor authentication (2FA).
Although Firefox Monitor doesn't do much more than the 'Have I Been Pwned' page does, it makes the tool available to a much larger audience. Firefox is already installed on hundreds of millions of computers, and too many of the users who use the Mozilla Foundation's browser have no idea whether their data is freely circulating on the Internet.
The Mozilla Foundation has promised to provide a complete end-user security and privacy tool this autumn and the Firefox Monitor seems to be the first to be released.
______________________________
- Online Truth yesterday today and tomorrow
- Internet: Is decentralization possible? What does the blockchain do?
- Firefox Quantum or Google Chrome what do you choose?
- Linus Torvalds what happened in the last few days?