I almost exclusively use private tabs and had quite a few of them open at any time for things I was working on. But apparently since I’ve last updated the default behavior changed to close private tabs and the option to keep them open was removed.
Digging into it, I’ve found the bug report in the link. The last entry in the bug report is concerning:
It looks like this was discussed in FXIOS-8672, although I don’t have access to that JIRA to take a look at the discussion.
Of the three PRs that I see that reference FXIOS-8672, one of them mentions:
I’ve intentionally kept this PR as simple as possible so we can release it and then be sure there is no major blow back from users. If we need to roll back it should be very simple in the current state.
I’m not sure what would count as “major blow back” but there is at least some hope that this functionality can be restored.
I agree with @garnetred that this behaviour isn’t limited to force closing the app.
https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/browsers/incognito-browser/
Incognito mode keeps your browser history private, and that’s pretty much it. If you want more privacy, you’ll need to add Tracking Protection and maybe even browse through a Virtual Private Network (VPN) service. Incognito mode can’t.
Ok, sure. But this is common knowledge. Private browsing is about not leaving trace on the local machine. It was never about remaining anonymous on the internet.
I thought you were referring to the browser sending browsing history to Google somehow.
Its less common than you think. Google just went through a lawsuit over this.
https://www.npr.org/2023/12/30/1222268415/google-settles-5-billion-privacy-lawsuit
I don’t typically root for Google anymore, but this one is silly. Its alway stated websites will still track you. Google is a website like other everyone.