Please don’t post pictures of text without transcribing the words
the title describes the screenshot entirely
@TonyTonyChopper @library_napper It does not.
Fuck blind people who need to google error messages, right?
/s
Upper screen: [Twitch Logo] Login to Twitch
Box with error notice: Your browser is currently not supported. Please use a recommended browser or learn more here.
Then there is just a standard login form
Sorry I’m blind, and I cannot see the image. Would you mind telling me what you posted?
A gif
Sorry I’m a fucking monkey, can you translate your comment to monkey noises?
I just logged in, no issues, probably check your extensions. Mine are minimal, includes uBlock, regular Firefox updated to latest.
Same, just logged in fine. Firefox on Linux from Arch repos.
Does it still let you sign in? I am currently signed in and it works
No, I tried to log in so i can change my password
Change user agent. Log in, opting to stay logged in for 30 days. Change user agent back.
That’s my routine with LibreWolf.
I also believe they don’t like a particular security setting present on FF based browsers, though I don’t recall off the top of my head which one.
Thanks, this works. I can log into Twitch again after changing the user agent. Twitch stopped me from logging on before this change saying “Your browser is not supported”. I’m using Librewolf. I suspect we’ll be seeing more of this kind of thing.
I login with Librewolf by disabling resist fingerprinting, then disabling all content blocking extensions, then clearing cookies, then restarting Librewolf. When you login, click “Remember Me” and re-enable everything
No problem.
I remembered the security setting Twitch didn’t like, as well. It was “Enable ResistFingerprinting”. If it gives you any more trouble, check the LibreWolf section in your settings for that. Same deal: toggle off, login, toggle back on.
Aite maybe this is a dumb question, but what is “changing the user agent”?
Something you shouldn’t have to do in order to use the internet.
There are browser plugins that let you change your user-agent request header to masquerade as another browser (e.g., Chrome).
Thanks!
When your browser connects to a website, it will tell the webserver what type of browser you are using in the HTTP headers. This can be used for serving a special web page for browsers with quirks, or it can be used to block certain browsers.
It may look something like this:
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:123.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/123.0
But you can use an extension like this one to spoof your user agent and send out one that corresponds to a chromium browser.
Grazie for the link
User-Agent is a string of information that browsers use to identify to a site what browser, version, build, etc you are using.
You can download FF extensions that allow you to spoof a different user-agent, making the site think you’re instead using Chrome, as an example.
Thanks!
Now that is a long password lol
Idk someone could probably brute force it in only a few trillion years, I’d make it longer if you plan to be using Twitch long-term.
You assume the person would never change the password. Someone with that long password is probably security concerned and is likely to change it after some time, even if its once in a year.
Yeah but you’d have to write it across like, 10 post-it notes along the top of your monitor. That’d get expensive!
Or just use a password manager. Then you only need to store one password across 15 post-it notes.
NIST does not recommend changing passwords. Its usually a bad practice
Why is changing passwords bad practice? What is the reasoning behind this? Changing passwords is highly recommended. There are many reasons why one should do this. Found this article: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/why-passwords-must-periodically-changed-roger-grimes and don’t agree. The argumentation seems like if you have to remember all passwords, but totally ignores password managers.
NIST used to tell orgs to require password rotation. Some years ago they changed their recommendation with an explanation that it adds not security benefits while it encourages users to write down or use shittier passwords.
Differing experinces might mean that Twitch is performing A/B testing on blocking Firefox.
Usually it means that OP either uses a “hardened” fork, or did some messing around with
about:config
likeresistFingerprinting
, without understanding the ramnifications of such hardening on various web technologies that aren’t primarily related to tracking/tracing.
This is a cookies/tracking issue, not a Firefox issue.
If you set it to allow tracking, it will let you login, and you can disable tracking again after and it will remember you.
Seems to be working OK for me on FF with Ublock and Privacy Badger running.
Same here
Anecdotally, it’s still working for me. Using uBlock Origin, logged in with a Twitch account.
What does the “recommend browser” link point to? Is it this page, which lists Firefox as a supported browser? https://help.twitch.tv/s/article/supported-browsers?language=en_US
Stop using recommended when you mean required FFS.
Everyone boo this service! BOOOOOOOOOOO!
I had to disable an extension to log in last time I got this message. Alternatively, force refresh the page.
The same thing happens with webkit.
Firefox is actually one of the recommended browsers, if you were to click on that link. Twitch just has some issues sometimes
Yup, I use Twitch all the time on Firefox (including yesterday), and with an ad-blocker as well.
When I got that message I just refreshed the page and tried logging in again and it worked.