Mozilla and Servo, Firefox

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Mozilla to beef-up Firefox private browsing capability
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Firefox goes stealthy, Linux on mainframes, new Linux Foundation projects, and more news
Most modern web browsers let you surf in incognito or private mode, which ensures websites you visit aren't saved in your browser history. But that doesn't offer true anonimity—as Google Chrome warns: "Going incognito doesn’t hide your browsing from your employer, your internet service provider, or the websites you visit."
Mozilla's trying to change that with a truly private browsing mode for Firefox. According to PC World, this new feature "is designed to block outside parties like ad networks or analytics companies from tracking users through cookies and browser fingerprinting." This feature is still in the pre-beta phase. While it's available in the latest developer editions of Firefox, this feature will likely show up in a general release of the browser sometime in the near future.
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Mozilla To Make Add-Ons Use WebExtensions API, Compatible With Chrome
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Mozilla's Servo Engine Now Capable Of Rendering GitHub Near Flawlessly
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