Free, privacy-respecting VPN becomes part of Firefox
Mozilla has announced big updates to Firefox, which improve user security and privacy.
Perhaps the most interesting of the announced updates is a free, built-in VPN. All Firefox users are promised 50 gigabytes of free VPN usage monthly going forward. According to Mozilla itself, free VPN services on the market are usually at least questionable regarding privacy protection - and Firefox's built-in VPN offers a solution precisely to this problem.
The VPN will be available already by the very end of March 2026, but only in the United States, France, Germany, and Britain. No timeline estimates were given yet as to when the VPN service will expand to other countries.
Firefox also takes a significant step forward, as it becomes the first browser to support the new Sanitizer API. This is a web security standard that helps prevent cross-site scripting (XSS) attacks, which are one of the most common and harmful web vulnerabilities. With the Sanitizer API, developers can easily clean untrusted HTML content before adding it to a webpage, which reduces vulnerabilities without requiring major changes to existing websites.

Microsoft has announced significant changes to its Windows 11 operating system, particularly by reducing the visibility of the AI assistant Copilot in various parts of the operating system and its applications. The decision is part of a broader strategy aimed at improving Windows' quality, performance, and user experience.
AI bots will surpass human users on the internet by 2027, estimates Matthew Prince, CEO of web infrastructure company Cloudflare.



