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The fact that Origin Private systems as used on Firefox et al may be buried in a profile folder or in a database makes them useless for many purposes, while the full version that gives access.to.any.user chosen directory is unlikely to be accepted by the privacy browsers.
What about a limited version that gives full access to a directory, which the browser would make easy to file, like ~/WebData/default/DOMAIN/files
That way, you could build apps that give users more control of their data, and even allowed for using offline sync solutions like SyncThing, without the concerns of users selecting locations they might regret.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
Yeah, it was locked!
I still think it belongs in the spec itself, with a flag to specifically
request it, since just changing behavior on Mozilla's side might break
something else, and relying on any implementation specific features is
rarely best practice.
The fact that Origin Private systems as used on Firefox et al may be buried in a profile folder or in a database makes them useless for many purposes, while the full version that gives access.to.any.user chosen directory is unlikely to be accepted by the privacy browsers.
What about a limited version that gives full access to a directory, which the browser would make easy to file, like ~/WebData/default/DOMAIN/files
That way, you could build apps that give users more control of their data, and even allowed for using offline sync solutions like SyncThing, without the concerns of users selecting locations they might regret.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: