Proton Pass breaks prowlarr on firefox since today

GravitySpoiled@lemmy.ml to Selfhosted@lemmy.world – 100 points –

Prowlarr returns There was an error loading this page when I click on an app and other sites. When I disable proton pass, it works as usual. Any idea how to solve it?

Permission denied to access property "matches"
  at toArray( (webpack://prowlarr/node_modules/focus-lock/dist/es2015/utils/tabUtils.js:8:26)
  at toArray( (webpack://prowlarr/node_modules/focus-lock/dist/es2015/utils/tabUtils.js:7:59)
  at parents.reduce(function (webpack://prowlarr/node_modules/focus-lock/dist/es2015/utils/tabUtils.js:22:64)
  at parents.reduce(function (webpack://prowlarr/node_modules/focus-lock/dist/es2015/utils/tabUtils.js:20:19)
  at getAllTabbableNodes (webpack://prowlarr/node_modules/focus-lock/dist/es2015/utils/DOMutils.js:31:43)
  at getAllTabbableNodes (webpack://prowlarr/node_modules/focus-lock/dist/es2015/focusMerge.js:37:41)
  at setFocus (webpack://prowlarr/node_modules/focus-lock/dist/es2015/setFocus.js:21:34)
  at withinHost (webpack://prowlarr/node_modules/react-focus-lock/dist/es2015/Trap.js:125:23)
  at lastTrap.returnFocus (webpack://prowlarr/node_modules/react-focus-lock/dist/es2015/Trap.js:260:4)
  at reducePropsToState(mountedInstances.map(function (webpack://prowlarr/node_modules/react-clientside-effect/lib/index.es.js:34:6)
  at componentDidUpdate (webpack://prowlarr/node_modules/react-clientside-effect/lib/index.es.js:57:8)
  at Yi (webpack://prowlarr/node_modules/react-dom/cjs/react-dom.production.min.js:219:501)
  at try{for (webpack://prowlarr/node_modules/react-dom/cjs/react-dom.production.min.js:259:159)
  at unstable_next (webpack://prowlarr/node_modules/scheduler/cjs/scheduler.production.min.js:18:342)
  at eg (webpack://prowlarr/node_modules/react-dom/cjs/react-dom.production.min.js:122:324)
  at Uj (webpack://prowlarr/node_modules/react-dom/cjs/react-dom.production.min.js:252:281)
  at Lj (webpack://prowlarr/node_modules/react-dom/cjs/react-dom.production.min.js:243:370)
  at jg (webpack://prowlarr/node_modules/react-dom/cjs/react-dom.production.min.js:123:114)
  at unstable_next (webpack://prowlarr/node_modules/scheduler/cjs/scheduler.production.min.js:18:342)
  at eg (webpack://prowlarr/node_modules/react-dom/cjs/react-dom.production.min.js:122:324)
  at jg (webpack://prowlarr/node_modules/react-dom/cjs/react-dom.production.min.js:123:63)
  at eg (webpack://prowlarr/node_modules/react-dom/cjs/react-dom.production.min.js:122:427)
  at Hb (webpack://prowlarr/node_modules/react-dom/cjs/react-dom.production.min.js:292:100)
  at $c (webpack://prowlarr/node_modules/react-dom/cjs/react-dom.production.min.js:73:354)
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Isn't that a program that is used for piracy? That seems like a reasonable thing to break for legal reasons.

Edit: it seems like a bug

By your metrics, possiblylinix127, Linux is also a system that is used for piracy. I can do piracy on Linux. That makes it illegal!

What are you using *arr for that isn't piracy?

Managing my blu ray library. Among other things. What are you using Linux for that isn't piracy?

Managing a legally procured library of media. Piracy is not the only way to get digital music, movies, and books.

I actually use Lidarr for managing CDs I've ripped myself. It helped me convert a mess of files with nonsensical names into a nice clean directory structure, plus I can track which albums I've got vs which ones I'm missing.

How to display the fact that you didn't do any double-checking before posting 101. It takes 5 seconds to do a search query, cmon.

All the *arr programs are usually file-sharing related, but come on. Quit your finger-wagging.

Piracy tools are more reliable than payed services lol

Except you are creating legal risk

Nope, there is no legal risk to a password manager because someone used it to fill a password in on a program for piracy.

Why would a random browser extension take it upon itself to snoop on your traffic to ensure that the websites you're using can't be used for illegal things, and then intentionally break it if it detects something it thinks it's illegitimate? That's a huge breach of privacy. It's just malware at that point. It's not like a court of law would hold your browser extensions responsible for your piracy. That's like blaming a cup holder because the car was used in a robbery.

No, I think this is just a bug. Especially since people have reported that the extension breaks other websites too.