The problem with a
lot of Internet users is lack of any idea about password management, so if they
get their computer replaced, they go as far as creating new Yahoo! or Gmail
accounts simply because the previous credentials were saved into their browser,
and they simply forgot any kind of info related to them. While this time won’t
talk about password management itself, this is also a pretty interesting
password-related subject: silently autosaving passwords in Firefox.
Autosave Passwords in Firefox
Obviously,
allowing Firefox to save your user names and passwords won’t make any other
noise apart from the mouse click needed, and this is exactly what I had in mind
– saving passwords without asking a confirmation! Sure, the evil minds reading
this could also use this Firefox hack to steal other people’s accounts… without
actually stealing their passwords!
As a final
addition to the last phrase above, I think it could be possible to retrieve
those passwords already save with the help of some additional program, but I
will be honest – I simply don’t care about that, and my advice is to stay away
from other people’s account, all right? Good!
Now, let’s get to
the hack itself, shall we? First of all, I have to thank Raymond for writing about this subject and giving me the
idea of going after it, too. All the credits for hacking the .JS file I’ll tell
you about next also go to him. Great job, Raymond!
If you really want
to get rid of that bar having the Remember, Never for This Site and Not Now
buttons, here’s what you should do after closing Firefox…
Silently Autosave Passwords in Firefox
Hack
1. Open a text
editor (my favorite is Notepad++, as you can see in the image above)
2. Open the file
nsLoginManagerPrompter.js, located in the components folder of your Firefox
main directory (for example, default location should be C:\Program Files\Mozilla
Firefox\components\)
3. Go to the
_showSaveLoginNotification function and remove everything between lines 642 to
711, or until you find the _removeLoginNotifications funtion, if you’re going
to use the Search feature instead of checking the line number…
4. Replace that
section with these two lines of code:
var pwmgr =
this._pwmgr;
pwmgr.addLogin(aLogin);
5. Save the file
and open Firefox.
That’s all, folks!
Now, all your user names and passwords will be saved automatically, so be sure
to use this feature carefully… and avoid using Firefox on public computers,
since someone else could have done this and turned this notorious browser into
some kind of keylogger!
Note: This is only
work at firefox 3.x
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