Public morty instance with no logs
Posted: Sun May 24, 2026 4:42 pm
You mean exactly what some good hardened (with addons) librewolf browser would do by default?Morty rewrites web pages to exclude malicious HTML tags and CSS/HTML attributes
Addons will not protect you from kikeflareLoadingXML wrote: Sun May 24, 2026 9:33 pmYou mean exactly what some good hardened (with addons) librewolf browser would do by default?Morty rewrites web pages to exclude malicious HTML tags and CSS/HTML attributes
Impressive, the level of noobness of the public privacy/anonymity hasn't chagned since 2021...
If cloudflare bothered me enough (they dont) I would create my own addon that bypass it.
Because who cares about proxychains...moeloli wrote: Mon May 25, 2026 9:42 pm
I think the main point is being able to access websoytes that block Tor/VPNs.
Wasting your server resources on such a useless thing, I am sure the "elites" would admire it.
I have let cloudflair scripts through on sites I can not live without, but have never tried to check the scripts to see what is in them.If cloudflare bothered me enough (they dont) I would create my own addon that bypass it.
However I didn't go and reverse engineer what CF acctually do when they scan your PC.
According to someone I know personally, it compares some cookies and other stuff you got somewhere else (possibly another CF site) to automatically let you in, otherwise a captcha is given.
Thus theoratically, spoofing whatever CF is using to validate you would bypass it.
I agree with your conclusion - that it's best to avoid JewScript as much as possible - but I have to do an "ackchyually": If scripts being altered is a concern, you could possibly set up some sort of browser add-on that would cache the scripts and automatically check if they're different every time you visit the website - if there's no such add-on, you could write it yourself.molly wrote: Thu Jun 04, 2026 12:03 am I have let cloudflair scripts through on sites I can not live without, but have never tried to check the scripts to see what is in them.
My biggest problem with scripts, including cloudflair scripts, is if I checked a script and seen it had no negative for me and let it through then how do I know that the script wont be changed tomorrow to do something intrusive? Once you let the script through can't it be altered by the owners of the site? If so this would mean you have to check the script every time you want to use the website in order to be sure you are secure.
This is why it is better to not have any scripts through your browser and stay away from sites that use them, unless necessary.
Yes this is the solution to the concern. But a lot of work just to visit some websites, especially for people who do not know how to write add-ons (like me).moeloli wrote: Thu Jun 04, 2026 1:02 pmI agree with your conclusion - that it's best to avoid JewScript as much as possible - but I have to do an "ackchyually": If scripts being altered is a concern, you could possibly set up some sort of browser add-on that would cache the scripts and automatically check if they're different every time you visit the website - if there's no such add-on, you could write it yourself.molly wrote: Thu Jun 04, 2026 12:03 am I have let cloudflair scripts through on sites I can not live without, but have never tried to check the scripts to see what is in them.
My biggest problem with scripts, including cloudflair scripts, is if I checked a script and seen it had no negative for me and let it through then how do I know that the script wont be changed tomorrow to do something intrusive? Once you let the script through can't it be altered by the owners of the site? If so this would mean you have to check the script every time you want to use the website in order to be sure you are secure.
This is why it is better to not have any scripts through your browser and stay away from sites that use them, unless necessary.