How do disable this Warning? Although this page is encrypted, the information you have entered is to be sent over an unencrypted connection
Going from a secure page back to a non secure page I am constantly getting this warning. I had it disabled in the config page but it has now come back. I dropped IE for Firefox but if I have to put up with this it's Bye Bye Firefox.
Bewurke troch the-edmeister op
Alle antwurden (6)
NVSteve - use my greasemonkey script a few posts above. It will fix your issue. http://userscripts.org/scripts/show/173384
I get the message when I have previously logged in with Hotmail credentials on Microsoft sites, particularly links from one KB article to another. I am not "posting" anything, but just the fact that I logged in (perhaps hours ago) causes the browser to think I'm "posting" something every time I change pages. One user here suggested turning off 3rd Party Cookies, which helped reduce the number of messages from 2 or 3 per page to only 1 per page. The question I have is: WHY were the options to suppress security messages taken away?
Thanks but I'm not a programmer or Firefox guru, so I have to plead ignorance. I don't even know HOW to run your script.
No, I never select "Stay signed in" - but if I never actually signed out, Microsoft allows me to use the support sites with the current credentials.
BTW, Edit This Post is broken, it brings up the wrong message to edit.
In any case, Microsoft Answers requires you to be logged in to participate (like this board does) and to be able to navigate to your threads easily. So it's not practical to log out in order to follow a link to a KB article, for example, because in the process of logging out, you lose the page you were on and sometimes it's hard to find again. It's just a silly waste of time and effort due to Mozilla removing the ability to suppress a message that in this case seems totally unnecessary.
NVSteve - Go to FireFox menu -> Add-ons. Search for Greasemonkey. Click to Install it. Restart. Now go to this page: http://userscripts.org/scripts/show/173384 . In the upper right corner, click Install. Now Microsoft sites will no longer bug you.