Fresh from announcing it is building an AI browsing mode in Firefox and laying the groundwork for agentic interactions in the Firefox 145 release, the corp arm of Mozilla is now flexing its AI muscles in the direction of those more likely to care: web devs.
The TABS API enables devs to create agents to automate web interactions, like clicking, scrolling, searching, and submitting forms “just like a human”. Real-time feedback and adaptive behaviours will, Mozilla say, offer “full control of the web, without the complexity.”
Relating back to my comment #1428, if you have Bitwarden, that can also be causing YouTube to lag. Current workaround is to add Youtube to Bitwarden's autofill block domain list. Bitwarden has been updated to 2025.11 now but the issue is still there.My Firefox install is having a lot of problems with YouTube. It could be a uBlock vs YouTube fight in the background? Its now causing Firefox to lock up for a bit, sometimes I just have to use task manager to end task.
I don't know what Bitwarden is? I think its Google fighting uBlock. I would rather have delays than adds so will just ignore it.Relating back to my comment #1428, if you have Bitwarden, that can also be causing YouTube to lag. Current workaround is to add Youtube to Bitwarden's autofill block domain list. Bitwarden has been updated to 2025.11 now but the issue is still there.
I don't know what Bitwarden is? I think its Google fighting uBlock. I would rather have delays than adds so will just ignore it.
It's a password manager, if you don't use it then it won't be what's causing your issue.I don't know what Bitwarden is? I think its Google fighting uBlock. I would rather have delays than adds so will just ignore it.
I don't have a problem with the AI integration as long as not forced to use it and it isn't scraping my session data - I've found it useful a couple of times since it was enabled on FF.
God I loathe the term agentic.
Cato Networks says it has discovered a new attack, dubbed "HashJack," that hides malicious prompts after the "#" in legitimate URLs, tricking AI browser assistants into executing them while dodging traditional network and server-side defenses.