Support for Firefox removed without notice

Anyone else horrified to get a pop up informing that Avast no longer support Firefox? I use Firefox on my Android phone as well as my desktop
so I suppose that cover is also gone? I have no wish to be forced to use chrome or edge so any ideas please?

https://support.avast.com/en-us/article/aosp-firefox-discontinuation-faq/

Thanks but I have already read that link. However as I don’t want to be forced to change to either chrome or edge I was hoping someone could suggest something.

Opera ?

https://www.opera.com/compare/opera-vs-firefox

The matter is likely trivial - you do not need the AVAST FF browser extension.

FF has enough built in security features and you can always install ad blockers and any number of alternative real time online anti-malware tools like Malwarebytes Browser Guard, which apparently supports Android, if you’re paranoid.

I posted this yesterday when I found out. https://forum.avast.com/index.php?topic=327475.0

Malwarebytes Browser Guard

Hi everyone who were kind enough to answer. You have given me a couple of good ideas to try. As for paranoia? Yes I admit to that a little after all these years :smiley:

Hi rocksteady, sorry but l didn’t see your post before I posted mine. Good to know that I was not the only person concerned.

My personal feelings on the browser extension:

Seems you have some clear insight into this, so if you would kindly indulge a clueless luddite Gen Xer:
I use only Firefox and have had avast for a few years (refuse to switch to Chrome or the other one). So with the browser extension now cut off, you suggest that avast will still offer other protection online even though Firefox is my sole browser?? Sorry, that must be so elementary but their implication almost seems to be “switch your browser or proceed at your own risk”… also, I agree their “rationale” for needing to drop support on Firefox sounds like gobbledygook. Thanks

The Web Shield is your primary defence against on-line malware/malicious sites, etc.
You only have to look at the old search results to see that not every entry had the Avast tick/check mark along side it (only those it knew about or had information).
Even those sites with that check mark would be scanned by the Web Shield when you try to connect.

The web shield was there way before the avast browser extension came into being.

Firefox, has a much smaller user base when you compare it with Chromium based browsers, so the workload to maintain this for Firefox, is exponentially greater than it is to support all of the chromium based browsers.

Both Firefox and Chromium based browsers have frequent browser updates, so the workload is high to maintain compatibility with the browsers and the Avast Browser Security app. Given the overhead isn’t directly proportionate to the size of the browser user-base, something has to give.