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I accidentally denied Firefox access to devices on my local network

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  • 2 have this problem
  • 28 views
  • Last reply by mlj1

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Hello all

There was a pop-up on my Mac'S Firefox asking if I allow Firefox access to my local network devices. I clicked on 'No' And obviously now I can't access for example my router's webpage or any other webpage fromo any devices on my local network. How I can switch it back? Internet access is working fine.

Many thanks, Bogdan

Hello all There was a pop-up on my Mac'S Firefox asking if I allow Firefox access to my local network devices. I clicked on 'No' And obviously now I can't access for example my router's webpage or any other webpage fromo any devices on my local network. How I can switch it back? Internet access is working fine. Many thanks, Bogdan

Chosen solution

The issue gets even worse as annoying and has only surfaced since Sequoia so is not a Firefox issue. On the upgrade to Firefox 131.0.3 from 131.0.2 just now I found that although access to the local network showed enabled as it had been, the Mac running Sequoia 15.0.1 did not recognise the Firefox upgrade as having this permission until it was rebooted. Accordingly I suspect the issue is pure Apple in Sequoia as never had this issue before, as Safari or Terminal can access the local network without issues and do not show as having permissions granted. I am expected now same issue to surface with Filezilla with its next upgrade as Filezilla also had to be granted permission on its first run which I had not used since I moved to Sequoia. I also discovered the new security configuration closes access to router configuration screens via Firefox which could be very difficult if the user does not understand and likes other browsers than Safari.

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you may need to reset site permissions:

Go to Settings > Privacy & Security > Permissions. Click Settings next to Location, Camera, Microphone, and find the denied site to allow access again.

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Nothing changed. With other browsers I have access. Firefox refuses. How can I unistall Firefox but to delete also cached data and run it without automatically connect to my Firefox account?

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Hello Bogdan,

I had the same issue! Here's how I solved it: In your Mac System Settings, go to Privacy & Security and find Local Network. There, you should see your applications that have access to your local devices. Please note that it may be in a different location or on tabs or so, depending on the Mac OS version that you use (I use Sequoia for example). You should see that Firefox has the switch disabled (grey). After switching on again, you'll probably need to restart Firefox or in any case close the tab or window and use a new one to re-access your local device. This worked for me, hopefully it also solves your issue.

@Firefox support: something basic like this should be in the Support site in my-maybe-not-so-humble-opinion...

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i have the same problem, but neither of the suggestions works for me. Under Privacy & Security / Local Network, Firefox isn't even listed, and there's no way to add an application. Edge doesn't have access to the local network either, but the slider in the Local Network page is enabled. Safari doesn't have an application entry either, but it does have access to the local network.

Modified by i.lewis.au

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Chosen Solution

The issue gets even worse as annoying and has only surfaced since Sequoia so is not a Firefox issue. On the upgrade to Firefox 131.0.3 from 131.0.2 just now I found that although access to the local network showed enabled as it had been, the Mac running Sequoia 15.0.1 did not recognise the Firefox upgrade as having this permission until it was rebooted. Accordingly I suspect the issue is pure Apple in Sequoia as never had this issue before, as Safari or Terminal can access the local network without issues and do not show as having permissions granted. I am expected now same issue to surface with Filezilla with its next upgrade as Filezilla also had to be granted permission on its first run which I had not used since I moved to Sequoia. I also discovered the new security configuration closes access to router configuration screens via Firefox which could be very difficult if the user does not understand and likes other browsers than Safari.

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Hi everyone

Indeed as @mlj1

mlj1 said

The issue gets even worse as annoying and has only surfaced since Sequoia so is not a Firefox issue. On the upgrade to Firefox 131.0.3 from 131.0.2 just now I found that although access to the local network showed enabled as it had been, the Mac running Sequoia 15.0.1 did not recognise the Firefox upgrade as having this permission until it was rebooted. Accordingly I suspect the issue is pure Apple in Sequoia as never had this issue before, as Safari or Terminal can access the local network without issues and do not show as having permissions granted. I am expected now same issue to surface with Filezilla with its next upgrade as Filezilla also had to be granted permission on its first run which I had not used since I moved to Sequoia. I also discovered the new security configuration closes access to router configuration screens via Firefox which could be very difficult if the user does not understand and likes other browsers than Safari.

Indeed, MacOS is to be blamed. Somehow now it is working on Sequoia 15.0.1. But in the meantime there was no update and no restart. Just after 2 days it started to work. Thank you everyone for helping me

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Unhappily the Sequoria bug can resurface on a Mac reboot too with the same version of Firefox reopening that worked fine before. The issue seems to be that the setting is not sticky but it can be toggled back on in this situation.

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