Font Fingerprint Defender
Defending against Font fingerprinting by reporting a fake value.
Extension for increasing security and privacy level of the user.
Review user movement across collected snapshots.
View collected rating snapshots from the latest 7-day window to assess rating stability.
Compare 1-day, 7-day, and 30-day net growth and growth rate.
Review publication date, version, supported languages, and crawl timestamps.
Review the store description, core capabilities, and common use cases.
What is JShelter?
JShelter is a browser extension to give back control over what your browser is doing. A JavaScript-enabled web page can access much of the browser's functionality, with little control over this process available to the user: malicious websites can uniquely identify you through fingerprinting and use other tactics for tracking your activity. JShelter aims to improve the privacy and security of your web browsing.
How does it work?
Like a firewall that controls network connections, JShelter controls the APIs provided by the browser, restricting the data that they gather and send out to websites. JShelter adds a safety layer that allows the user to choose if a certain action should be forbidden on a site, or if it should be allowed with restrictions, such as reducing the precision of geolocation to the city area. This layer can also aid as a countermeasure against attacks targeting the browser, operating system or hardware.
Please see the FAQ (https://jshelter.org/faq/) and our blog (https://jshelter.org/blog/) for more information about the extension.
What is the threat model?
Inspect the latest comments and rating distribution.
Store average score: 4.5. The bars below are calculated from synced review text only, so they may be empty for extensions that have public ratings but no synced comments yet.
Review related products from the Chrome Web Store detail page.
Defending against Font fingerprinting by reporting a fake value.
OptMeowt allows Web users to make use of their rights to opt out from the sale and sharing of personal data
Your browser, your rules — your digital fingerprint, in your control.
Protects you against tracking through "free", centralised, content delivery.
Defending against Canvas fingerprinting by reporting a fake value.
Defending against WebGPU fingerprinting by reporting a fake value.
New update on Jan 9, but still broken. JShelter keeps breaking modern sites and making them think my browser is outdated even in "recommended" level mode. Whitelisting doesn't work at all!. What's troubling is the level advance tracking/fingerprinting has gone now. With Google Search I get hit with difficult capchas each time. All this has become normalized. No extension (at least on Chromium) works, So I gave up. Uninstalled.
I don't know where to start. It worked, then didn't after the mandatory MV3, then worked again.Then stopped, started. Rinse and repeat. Adding an exception to disable on certain sites, it continues to block. It's terribly unreliable.
worked for me five stars ,don't forget to turn on allow user scripts
Be as secure as epstein :) Yipeeee
Fingerprinting protection for Vivaldi that actually works.
Great addon!
Благодарность разработчикам. Правда, поднагружает процессор (это неточно, проверьте)
this is a really good extension! it worked on install without me having to make any changes, and going to a site like EFF Cover Your Tracks showed that my fingerprint had indeed been randomized. there are also a lot of additional settings to customize too, if you want to go even deeper. happy that extensions like this exist that focus on privacy and have good ease-of-use!
Pretty good extension. If you're a user that found NoScript to be a little too time consuming to get setup properly etc. I'd try this out. It's basically a "set it and forget it" form of NoScript that does all the blocking you need with no initial setup or tinkering, although you can still tinker AND there are plenty of settings to tinker with.
Unusable black hole. In the first 2 hours of using (Vivaldi 5.6.2867.62 on Win7-x64): 1. Kills reCaptcha service (until JS Shield prohibited - the very essense of the extension) 2. Kills DisQus service (until JS Shield prohibited - the very essense of the extension) 3. The bug reports page can not be found from the main site 4. When finally found - it requests you to create new account (logging in with OpenID/OAuth through other sites? no, not in 21 century) just for the privileger of laying 1-2 bug reports 5. When you do - it denies to ackknowledge the already xreated and activated account and instead goes infinite circles through HTTP login screens. Well... if that is how they bug-fixing page "works" and if it is how the casual browsing becomes just after 2 hours with this "www-killer feature" you may extrapolate how it would go further...