Análises de Don't "Accept" image/webp
Don't "Accept" image/webp por jscher2000
20 análises
Resposta do desenvolvedor
publicado há um diaHi, it depends on the site design. You can test on Total Wine glassware page (https://www.totalwine.com/accessories-more/accessories/glassware/c/001555). Use the Page Info dialog (Ctrl+i, Mac: Command+I) Media list to check the image formats. Reload after changing the "Strip image/webp" setting and check again. With the extension stripping webp, the original formats (PNG, JPEG) are used. If that doesn't work for you, check this article just in case: https://support.mozilla.org/kb/extensions-private-browsing
If there are specific sites you would like help with, you can try creating a new issue at https://github.com/jscher2000/dont-accept-webp/issues or emailing me at jscher2000@outlook.com.Resposta do desenvolvedor
publicado há 3 mesesHi pjcamp, thank you for your report.
This extension makes a change to how Firefox requests images, but many sites ignore the change. If there is a specific site you want to mention, you can contact me by creating a new Github issue on https://github.com/jscher2000/dont-accept-webp/issues or emailing jscher2000@outlook.com.
On the other hand, if it fails on every single site, check for this issue: https://support.mozilla.org/kb/extensions-private-browsing
There also are some pages that give Firefox multiple format options (picture tag/source tags) and it selects WebP for some reason. I don't have a fix for that yet.Resposta do desenvolvedor
publicado há 2 anosHi, there is one new permission in version 0.9, the "management" permission, which allows checking the names of your installed add-ons and whether they are enabled or disabled. You can see the added code in the comparison page on Github: https://github.com/jscher2000/dont-accept-webp/commit/25eea9332a3819f5d0c9c224b7178bd3db830694
If anyone prefers to install the previous version, you can grab it from the All Versions page at: https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/addon/dont-accept-webp/versions/
And if you do not trust me, don't run my add-ons.- DO NOT INSTALL THIS PLUGIN. MASSIVE SECURITY RISK!
This plugin recently changed the permissions it wants you to grant it to access ALL of your data used on websites. This means this plugin can now collect cookies, passwords, whatever it wants if it so chooses. The plugin creator "assures" you it's not collecting data, but there is simply no way to be sure. I heavily recommend deinstalling this plugin immediately. The plugin didn't need said massive security risking permissions to work before, and that it needs them now is extremely fishy. My personal guess is that the creator/s bank on people just updating the permissions without reading the permission changes, to then collect user data and sell it. So. DO. NOT. INSTALL.Resposta do desenvolvedor
publicado há 2 anosActually, this add-on has ALWAYS needed and requested the "< all_urls >" permission in order to modify requests to websites. That is *not* new, but probably you have become more security-conscious since you originally installed it. We should all be careful, and there is a support article on this: https://support.mozilla.org/kb/tips-assessing-safety-extension
If anyone prefers to install the previous version, you can grab it from the All Versions page at: https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/addon/dont-accept-webp/versions/
(What *is* new in version 0.9 is checking whether you have another add-on known to have a conflict with this one.)
For what it's worth, I still have no interest whatsoever in what you are doing in your Firefox, and there's no way for me to know because this add-on still doesn't send me any data. If you don't believe me, then don't use the add-on. Resposta do desenvolvedor
publicado há 2 anosHi Niklas, if you right-click > Open Image in New Tab before dragging, the tab should tell you the true format (hold your mouse over the tab to see the full tooltip).
You can test using https://i2.wp.com/radical-mag.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/@Test-BMW-320d-8.jpg -- normally, if you hover your mouse over the tab, it will say it is a WEBP image; with the extension enabled, it should be a JPG image.
If it doesn't work on that one, check whether it's the private window issue: https://support.mozilla.org/kb/extensions-private-browsing
If you want to send me some problem URLs, you can create an issue at https://github.com/jscher2000/dont-accept-webp/issues or email me at jscher2000@outlook.com.Resposta do desenvolvedor
publicado há 2 anosYou can test using https://i2.wp.com/radical-mag.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/@Test-BMW-320d-8.jpg -- normally, if you hover your mouse over the tab, it will say it is a WEBP image; with the extension enabled, it should be a JPG image.
If it doesn't work on that one, check whether it's the private window issue: https://support.mozilla.org/kb/extensions-private-browsing
If you want to send me some problem URLs, you can create an issue at https://github.com/jscher2000/dont-accept-webp/issues or email me at jscher2000@outlook.com.- Avaliado em 1 de 5por The Virginian, há 2 anosInstalled it and tried to save an image and it immediately didn't work. Useless
Resposta do desenvolvedor
publicado há 2 anosWhat this add-on does is remove a signal that Firefox normally sends to the server that your browser can handle WebP images. The idea is to discourage the server from sending WebP in place of JPEG or PNG.
I'm not sure what problem you ran into with saving an image not working, but do you mean you still got a WebP image? That definitely can happen when the site insists on sending you one, or when the page is using a "picture" tag, but this add-on should help on most sites.
If you need an add-on to convert a WebP image to something else, check out https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/addon/save-webp-as-png-or-jpeg/ - Avaliado em 1 de 5por saint23thomas, há 3 anos
- Avaliado em 1 de 5por Usuário 17358023 do Firefox, há 3 anosDoesn't uninstall properly. Had to reinstall Firefox to unbreak pages using .webp
Resposta do desenvolvedor
publicado há 3 anosThat's strange. Disabling the extension should prevent it from making any changes. Any chance that the "image.webp.enabled" preference somehow got set to false in about:config? (I don't recommend setting that preference to false.) - Avaliado em 1 de 5por SkylarPhoenix, há 3 anos9gag still saves as webp and when I copy image and paste it, it still pastes it as webp
Resposta do desenvolvedor
publicado há 3 anosFrom what I can see, 9gag uses a newer method of image substitution: a picture tag listing both webp and jpg options, and Firefox is choosing webp. This extension can't help with that issue. Currently, I recommend behind! to work with that design: https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/addon/behind/ - Avaliado em 1 de 5por Moltres Rider, há 4 anosDoes not even deserve 1 star. False advertisement. It DOES NOT strip images of webp. EVERY PNG and JPG file STILL downloads as webp. I tried like 20 different images from like 15 websites that are clearly JPG and PNG, ALL try to save as webp.
Resposta do desenvolvedor
publicado há 4 anosWhen you enable the extension (stop sign showing) the Accept header should no longer list image/webp. You can check on https://www.jeffersonscher.com/res/jstest.php When you disable the extension (yellow warning triangle is showing), the extension doesn't strip out image/webp.
If yours doesn't work either way, I can think of two possible reasons:
(1) You are using a private window but didn't enable the extension to run in private windows. In this case, the stop sign/triangle toolbar button will be missing. See the following article to fix this problem: https://support.mozilla.org/kb/extensions-private-browsing
(2) There is a conflict between this extension and another extension or proxy that also modifies the Accept header. This could be hard to track down. - Avaliado em 1 de 5por Mephistopheles, há 4 anosDoes exactly what I wanted. Thanks!
Edit: Well now I'm getting the thrice cursed webp again. Why are companies always pushing for things nobody wants or asked for??
Edit: Doesn't work at all