"We are happy to bring Firefox Monitor to users in their native language and make it easier for people to learn about data breaches and take action to protect themselves," said Firefox browser developer Mozilla, quoted on Saturday (17/11).
When personal information is at risk of being affected by data violations, reading news and information in the user's native language will help users more easily control. Now Firefox Monitor is available in Albanian, Chinese, Czech, Dutch, English (Canadian), French, Frisian, German, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Malay, Portuguese (Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Russian, Slovak, Slovenian , Spain (Argentina, Mexico, and Spain), Sweden, Turkey, Ukraine and Welsh.
The availability of Firefox Monitor in many languages was realized thanks to the help of Mozilla volunteers. Now Firefox Monitor is available for more than 2.5 billion non-English users.
Mozilla also revealed that it has recently added a notification feature to the Quantum Firefox browser that will notify desktop users when they visit sites that have committed data violations. With this feature, users will be reminded when visiting sites that have reportedly committed data violations. Users can click on the warning to visit Firefox Monitor and scan the email to make sure the user has a cyber attack or not.
Here's a short step-by-step guide on how Firefox Monitor works.
1. Visit monitor.firefox.com to see if your email has become part of a known data breach. Just type in your email address, and it will be scanned against a database that functions as a known data breach library.
2. Learn about data breaches in the future. Register with Firefox Monitor using your email address and Mozilla will notify you of violations of the data being studied.
3. Use Firefox to learn about the sites you visit that are known to be involved in data breaches.
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