How to Disable the Unsecured Login Prompt in Firefox.

If you are a Mozilla Firefox user and love the service but hate the annoying Insecure Login Prompt, this guide will show you how to disable it permanently, so you can log in without being bothered each and every time.

How to Remove Specific Website Auto Suggestions your Browser.

This feature was implemented in Mozilla Firefox 52 and is intended to be a security/safe browsing improvement. However, after some time it may become quite annoying depending on how frequently you are receiving the notification. The warning specifically shows when you are logging into websites that are not https.

This Connection Is Not Secure. Logins Entered Here Could Be Compromised.

The reasoning behind this warning message is simple, HTTPS is a much more secure and encrypted protocol whereas HTTP can quite easily be hijacked. As well as showing you a text warning Firefox also disables all of your pre-saved auto-form filling features. If you know what you are doing though, this feature hinders you more than it helps you. Below are the steps you can follow to disable it.

Disable the Insecure Login Prompt on Firefox.

Disabling the insecure login prompt in Firefox is quite easy to do so long as you know where to look. Just make sure that you are running the latest version of Firefox otherwise, the option isn’t going to exist.

That is the first part of the change completed (disabling the warning). The next step is to re-enable the Firefox auto form fill feature.

Doing this will now change the function of Firefox back to its previous version.

There were also a couple of other major changes to Firefox in the latest version. With support for all but one NPAPI plugin being removed. The only NPAPI plugin remaining in Firefox is Adobe Flash.

Note: These plugins can be re-enabled for the time being but are rumored to be on the chopping block completely come Firefox version 53. If you think you can just swap browsers, Google Chrome has previously disabled support for NPAPI plugins also.

Comments