Firefox itself is in the official repositories and is verified, if you want to install any of the tens of thousands of Firefox add-ons then you take the responsibility and risks and if there is an issue you take it up with the people who manage and maintain the Firefox/Mozilla add-on site.
If you want something to block ads with (and you're not dead set on using just a firefox extension) the following code is what I use. It will block all those nasty ads on ALL browsers & programs.
Adblock should be the only add-on to be part of the repository though, in my own opinion. The Mozilla add-on page is encrypted and considered safe and the add-ons are reviewed and if not a message will be posted with a warning .
If you are in doubt about the authenticity of the site use the Customize Fiefox link in your bookmarks menu .


# # Precaución, debe ejecutarse como root #Comprueba si quien ejecuta el script es root, y si no es root, se re-ejecuta como root. = "0" ] && gksu --description "Bloqueo Fácil"
# # Precaución, debe ejecutarse como root #Comprueba si quien ejecuta el script es root, y si no es root, se re-ejecuta como root. = "0" ] && gksu --description "Bloqueo Fácil" [[
# # Precaución, debe ejecutarse como root #Comprueba si quien ejecuta el script es root, y si no es root, se re-ejecuta como root. = "0" ] && gksu --description "Bloqueo Fácil" $0 #Cuando temrina de ejecutarse como root, no va a tratar de ejecutarse como no-root [ "$UID" !
It and the PAC filter will prevent your user Firefox data area (~/.mozilla) from being contaminated with those nasty toolbars that track you. But the fact that your browser configurations are the most likely thing to be infected is why I provide a script to backup your user browser configuration data area (~/.mozilla): Browser It also has provisions for Opera. But once you have fail safe backups some place, once the browser infection hits you, you just do (in some sort of terminal): 1. But installing 7-zip is what YOU SHOULD be using apt-get for.
Those and other Java Script extensions are about the only "infection" you get on most desktop Linux installs. Make a backup of your bookmarks (unless contaminated) 2. apt-get was made primarily for making system wide changes.
I cannot help but notice lots of threads and articles online telling you that apt-get will install that add-on if you specify "mozilla-firefox-adblock," or yet "xul-ext-adblock-plus." However, none of those commands seem to work. Has it left the repositories, and in that case, why so? Why not install it directly from addons.(https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/adblock-plus/)?
I usually rely on repositories for most things, but I let Firefox manage its own extensions.
||
# # Precaución, debe ejecutarse como root #Comprueba si quien ejecuta el script es root, y si no es root, se re-ejecuta como root. = "0" ] && gksu --description "Bloqueo Fácil" $0 #Cuando temrina de ejecutarse como root, no va a tratar de ejecutarse como no-root [ "$UID" !It and the PAC filter will prevent your user Firefox data area (~/.mozilla) from being contaminated with those nasty toolbars that track you. But the fact that your browser configurations are the most likely thing to be infected is why I provide a script to backup your user browser configuration data area (~/.mozilla): Browser It also has provisions for Opera. But once you have fail safe backups some place, once the browser infection hits you, you just do (in some sort of terminal): 1. But installing 7-zip is what YOU SHOULD be using apt-get for.Those and other Java Script extensions are about the only "infection" you get on most desktop Linux installs. Make a backup of your bookmarks (unless contaminated) 2. apt-get was made primarily for making system wide changes.I cannot help but notice lots of threads and articles online telling you that apt-get will install that add-on if you specify "mozilla-firefox-adblock," or yet "xul-ext-adblock-plus." However, none of those commands seem to work. Has it left the repositories, and in that case, why so? Why not install it directly from addons.(https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/adblock-plus/)?I usually rely on repositories for most things, but I let Firefox manage its own extensions.
]] #Cuando temrina de ejecutarse como root, no va a tratar de ejecutarse como no-root [ "$UID" !
It and the PAC filter will prevent your user Firefox data area (~/.mozilla) from being contaminated with those nasty toolbars that track you. But the fact that your browser configurations are the most likely thing to be infected is why I provide a script to backup your user browser configuration data area (~/.mozilla): Browser It also has provisions for Opera. But once you have fail safe backups some place, once the browser infection hits you, you just do (in some sort of terminal): 1. But installing 7-zip is what YOU SHOULD be using apt-get for.
Those and other Java Script extensions are about the only "infection" you get on most desktop Linux installs. Make a backup of your bookmarks (unless contaminated) 2. apt-get was made primarily for making system wide changes.
I cannot help but notice lots of threads and articles online telling you that apt-get will install that add-on if you specify "mozilla-firefox-adblock," or yet "xul-ext-adblock-plus." However, none of those commands seem to work. Has it left the repositories, and in that case, why so? Why not install it directly from addons.(https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/adblock-plus/)?
I usually rely on repositories for most things, but I let Firefox manage its own extensions.
#Cuando temrina de ejecutarse como root, no va a tratar de ejecutarse como no-root [ "$UID" !It and the PAC filter will prevent your user Firefox data area (~/.mozilla) from being contaminated with those nasty toolbars that track you. But the fact that your browser configurations are the most likely thing to be infected is why I provide a script to backup your user browser configuration data area (~/.mozilla): Browser It also has provisions for Opera. But once you have fail safe backups some place, once the browser infection hits you, you just do (in some sort of terminal): 1. But installing 7-zip is what YOU SHOULD be using apt-get for.Those and other Java Script extensions are about the only "infection" you get on most desktop Linux installs. Make a backup of your bookmarks (unless contaminated) 2. apt-get was made primarily for making system wide changes.I cannot help but notice lots of threads and articles online telling you that apt-get will install that add-on if you specify "mozilla-firefox-adblock," or yet "xul-ext-adblock-plus." However, none of those commands seem to work. Has it left the repositories, and in that case, why so? Why not install it directly from addons.(https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/adblock-plus/)?I usually rely on repositories for most things, but I let Firefox manage its own extensions.