Mozilla Support ▸ JavaScript settings and preferences for interactive web pages.For more information about JavaScript settings in Mozilla Firefox, refer to the following article from Mozilla Support: If you have disabled JavaScript using a browser add-on that allows you to customize your JavaScript settings, you need to re-enable JavaScript using this add-on. JavaScript is enabled for all websites by default in Mozilla Firefox. Google Chrome Help ▸ Clear, enable, and manage cookies in Chrome.To manage your cookie preferences in Google Chrome, refer to the instructions under Change your cookie settings in the following article from Google Chrome Help: This means that all webpages with a web address beginning (such as allow JavaScript. Click the Add button next to Allowed to use JavaScript.Ī now appears on your Allowed to use JavaScript list.Click Privacy and security ▸ Site Settings. If you prefer to enable JavaScript only for webpages that are part of the domain, follow the steps below: Google Chrome Help ▸ Fix videos & games that won't play.To enable JavaScript for all websites that you visit using Google Chrome, refer to the instructions under Step 1: Turn on JavaScript in the following article from Google Chrome Help: To enable JavaScript and / or cookies, refer to the information in the relevant section below according to your web browser: This is because the Avast Store is unable to load and function correctly without these settings enabled. When you make a purchase via the Avast Store, you may be notified that you need to enable JavaScript and / or cookies in your web browser. I would temper that with the following thought if there is another world war, the internet will most definitely be one of the battlegrounds.Enabling JavaScript and cookies in your web browser This is not me wearing a tinfoil hat nor being unjustifiably paranoid, it's just a technical reality coupled with a healthy respect for Murphy's Law ~ if ever anyone effectively spoofs mygov, or mygov itself is somehow compromised and starts delivering malicious content, you're probably gunna be screwed B^) IMHO though, I'd remove the exception (so avast can keep doing it's job), and clear your browser cache/cookies for mygov I never use the stuff myself, but understand how so called anti-virus softwares work, so when I saw mygov were shilling their new beta website.to -me-, it's like "I'll bet you avast is having a hissyfit about cookie session ids when the landing page proffers a login alternate.you'd have to change cookie data to pull that off anyway server end, so the browser's probably stuck with invalid/stale cookies".from a netops view it's a pita when ecommerce websites do this, when you've got 2 different sites as it were, accessing/changing the same database, with pay portals weaved inbetween.just 'yuk'.it causes shit like this to happen, frigging ebay do it all the time with minor site updates. The elephant in the room of course.and I thank 'epaclm' for putting my hypothesis to the test. This is particularly so with business/corporate computing environments ~ you see on the news of one or another computer system being hacked, and that how all that website's clients/customers go on to hacked as well (ransomware typically) - you would (*not* =) be surprised to find how many business/corporate LANs all have reliance on some external/3rdparty website for operations, and every single computer is running anti-virus software.that has an exception for aforesaid external/3rdparty websites.which get hacked - I know, I've been there in times past in audit and mopping up =) I made an exception and it works now, very easy in the end, thanks for all the info everyoneI'm no fan of putting in domain-name exceptions into something like an anti-virus (or many other) software programs ~ in essence, what you're instructing said software program with, is that you totally trust that domain-name will never serve malicious content to your computer, and that there's no chance at all, ever, that said domain-name/site will ever be 'spoofed', and that equally there's no chance at all the website of that domain-name will ever get hacked itself and end up serving you malicious content.
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