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Slimjet browser review
Slimjet browser review











  1. #Slimjet browser review 32 bit#
  2. #Slimjet browser review software#

Security updates fix known security bugs. Hence you should really prefer to avoid using a web browser version that is no longer getting security updates.

#Slimjet browser review software#

The most vulnerable piece of software for the average home user is in fact their web browser, because you run so much untrusted code on it (almost every website these days has code to make it work, that's downloaded to your web browser and run on your computer without any review). Your web browser isn't an exception to that. So say you set Netflix as the homepage for Chrome, and don't visit other websites with it, that's probably a manageable risk.Īll non-trivial software has bugs and some bugs can be used by malware developers to make the software do things it shouldn't. All that would risk getting content on your browser you can't trust not to at some point carry malware your browser is vulnerable to. I would disable all Chrome extensions though, not use a custom theme, and do not sign in to Chrome itself (for browser sync).

#Slimjet browser review 32 bit#

If you only use Chrome 32 bit from now on to watch Netflix, it will probably be alright. xenopeek has an excellent tutorial on using firejail here. You can also increase your security by sandboxing your browser, so it can only see a small part of your system and is not allowed to do certain tasks. It's a little tricky to use at first since it can break some websites, but it is simple to use once you've given it some time.

slimjet browser review

It helps reroute traffic through https when possible.įinally, on Firefox and Palemoon have a great add-on called NoScript, which blocks scripts on websites.

slimjet browser review

https-everywhere is a great extension too. Most browser attacks come through advertisements, so a good adblocker is almost a necessity. You can make browsers even more secure with a few good extensions. In Windows, there would likely have been much more damage done. whatever_browser and the damage was removed. In both cases, the damage was limited to the browser profile. In my two years here I have only found two cases in which a browser was hijacked. Now as to your more general question, how secure is browsing on Linux? Quite safe when compared to the risk you take on Windows when browsing.

slimjet browser review

I don't know much about slimjet but it does seem to be actively maintained and supported. So why take the risk?ģ2-bit Chromium on the other hand is still supported and is very similar to Chrome (no flash but the rest is almost the same). Could it be much worse? Absolutely, especially considering that flash in involved. Could the worst this means be that a hacker steals all your holiday photos? Perhaps. The browser isn't supported which means that security bugs won't be fixed any more. My advice about 32-bit Chrome is to leave it alone.













Slimjet browser review