Firefox is the only browser that answers only to you, our users; so all of us who work on Firefox spend a lot of effort making your browsing experience more private and secure. We update Firefox every 6 weeks, and every new change ships to you as fast as we can make and verify it. For a few releases now, we have been landing bits and pieces of a broader set of privacy and security changes. This post will outline the big picture of all these changes.

Site Identity and Permissions Panel

The main project involved improvements to the way Firefox handles permission requests from sites that want to do things that the web platform doesn’t allow by default — like accessing your laptop’s camera or GPS sensor. To find out how our existing model fares, we ran it through a number of user studies and gathered feedback from users and web developers alike.

What we found was clear: users were having trouble making full use of web permissions. Here are some of the observations:

It’s easy by design to dismiss a permission prompt, to prevent websites from nagging you. But it’s not so obvious how to get back to an inadvertently dismissed prompt, which users found confusing.

Managing the permissions of an individual site was hard, due to the multitude of presented options.

It was cumbersome to grant access to screen sharing. This was because it was difficult to select which area of the screen would be shared and because screen sharing was only permitted on websites included in a manually curated list.

In order for the open web platform to be on par with the capabilities of native, closed platforms, we needed to fix these issues. So we first focused on putting all privacy and security related information in one place. We call it the Site Identity and Permissions Panel, or more affectionately, the Control Center™.

The Site Identity panel appears when you click on the circled “i” icon — “i” for “information” — on the left side of the Awesome Bar. The panel is designed to be the one-stop shop for all security and privacy information specific to the site you’re on. This includes encrypted connections certificate, mixed content warning messages, tracking protection status, as well as non-default permissions. We were happy to see Chrome adopt a similar UI, too.

Elevated Privileges for Non-Default Permissions

By default, web sites need an elevated level of privilege to access your computer hardware like camera, microphone, GPS or other sensors. When a site requests such a permission and the user grants it, the Site Identity panel will display the allowed item along with an “x” button to revert it. In the case of particularly privacy-sensitive permissions, like microphone or camera access, the icon will have a red hue and a gentle animation to draw attention.

When a site has been granted elevated privileges, the “i” icon in the URL bar is badged with a dot that indicates the additional information present in the Site Identity panel. This lets you assess the security properties of your current session with a quick glance at the awesomebar, where the “i” and lock icons are displayed together.

Users who want even more fine-grained control over all available permissions can go to the Permissions tab in the Page Info dialog (right arrow in the Identity panel -> More Information).

Permission Prompt and Dialog

Permission dialogs are now more consistent than before, both in terms of available actions and messaging.

When a site asks for a permission, a permission prompt appears with a message and iconography specific to the type of permission being requested and the available actions. Most of the time, there will only be two: allow or don’t allow access. The default action will stand out in a blue highlight, making the common action easier to perform.

In the few cases of permission prompts with more than two actions, a drop-down menu will appear next to the secondary action button.

Permanently allowing or rejecting a permission for a site is done by checking the always present “Remember this decision” option.

We have received a lot of feedback about how these prompts are easy to dismiss and how users often couldn’t figure out how to bring them back. In the new design, permission prompts stay up even when you interact with the page. You can of course ignore it and continue to use the page normally. But thanks to the persistence of the prompt, it’s now easier to associate site misbehavior — webcams that don’t work, locations that won’t display — with an allow/don’t allow button that needs your response.

Furthermore, disallowed permission requests are now displayed as strikethrough icons in the Awesome Bar to hint at the potential cause of site breakage. For example a video conferencing site will probably not be functioning very well if you reject its camera permission request. So the crossed-out camera icon will remain afterwards, next to the “i” icon, to remind you of that fact.

Going to a different tab will hide the prompt (because it’s specific to the site you have open on each tab), but when the prior tab is selected again, the prompt will reappear.

Audio, Video and Screen Sharing Permissions

WebRTC-related permissions have even more new changes.

For starters, screen sharing now doesn’t require sites to be added to a separate whitelist. This means that all sites can now use WebRTC screen sharing in Firefox.

Also, screen sharing now includes a preview of the content that will be shared to make it easier to identify the right screen, application or window to share.

In the riskiest of cases, such as sharing the entire screen or sharing the Firefox application, a scary warning message is displayed to ensure you know what you are about to do.

Moreover, when you have granted a video conferencing site access to both your camera and microphone, reverting the permission grant for one permission will also revert it for the other. This will help you avoid accidentally leaking your private data.

Add-on Panel Improvements

While working on these security improvements we fixed some old platform panel bugs that used to affect all kinds of panels, including those created by add-ons. Therefore if you are using an add-on that displays popup panels you should have an improved experience even if the panels are not related to permission prompts.

Error Pages

And finally, error pages also received some new smarts.

The most common cause for secure connection errors turns out to be user systems having the wrong time. Firefox will now detect when your clock seems way off and will suggest in the error message how to fix it.

Another common cause for broken connections is the presence of a captive portal. Firefox will now detect that case and prompt you to log in the captive portal. Even though some operating systems have built-in support for detecting captive portals, if you regularly use social network accounts to log in, the experience with Firefox will be smoother. This change is now in Nightly and Developer Edition versions and should ship soon in the stable release.