Article 5BZQT Firefox continues cracking down on tracking with cache partitioning

Firefox continues cracking down on tracking with cache partitioning

by
Jim Salter
from Ars Technica - All content on (#5BZQT)
firefox_partitioned-800x566.png

Enlarge / Breaking up the browser cache into separate pools prevents sophisticated timing probes that let one site know whether you're logged in to another. (credit: Mozilla / Jim Salter)

Firefox version 85 will be released in January 2021, and one of its features is increased user privacy via improvements in client-side storage (cache) partitioning. This has been widely and incorrectly reported elsewhere as network partitioning, likely due to confusion around the privacy.partition.network state flag in Firefox, which allows advanced users to enable or disable cache partitioning as desired.

What is cache partitioning-and why might I want it?

In a nutshell, cache partitioning is the process of keeping separate cache pools for separate websites, based on the site requesting the resources loaded, rather than simply on the site providing the resources.

With a traditional, globally scoped browser cache, you might see behavior like this:

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