"Your Browser Is Being Managed By Your Organization" suddenly appeared in my Firefox 114 settings page
I've looked into this situation, and none of the solutions submitted online work.
I went to about:preferences, and set "security.certerrors.mitm.auto_enable_enterprise_roots" to false, but "security.enterprise_roots.enabled" is set to true and locked; I can't change it.
First of all, I am not using Avast, AVG, Kapersky, etc. antivirus; I'm using Win 10's built-in security suite, so it's not my antivirus causing it.
To double check that, I opened the Registry and went to " HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Policies\Mozilla\Firefox\" and "HKEY_CURRENT_USER\SOFTWARE\Policies\Mozilla\Firefox\", looking for a Mozilla\Firefox\Polices key, and neither one had any Mozilla keys.
I even checked the Autoconfig settings, and found no settings in the JS file that had anything to do with Enterpise Roots (I renamed the file temporarily to disable it), but I still can't disable security.enterprise_roots.enabled
I have no "Organization"; I'm an independent home user, so needless to say I'm concerned that Firefox is suddenly saying some organization is controlling my Firefox.
Win 10 Home Ver. 22H2 OS Build: 19045.3086 Windows Feature Experience Pack 1000.19041.1000.0
Antivirus/Firewall: Windows 10 Security
Firefox: 114.0.2 (64 bit)
被選擇的解決方法
Yeah. There was a Distribution folder in the C:\Mozilla Firefox folder. I deleted it and the json file in it, and that message is gone now.
I just have no idea how that suddenly got in there. I've always been using Windows 10's own Security Suite, not any other antivirus or internet security software.
從原來的回覆中察看解決方案 👍 0所有回覆 (2)
The Troubleshooting Information shows that you have: security.enterprise_roots.enabled: TRUE This means that you likely have/had software that wants to inject itself in the internet connection.
You can click the "Your browser is being managed by your organization" notification or open the about:policies page to see if policies are active and if errors are reported.
You can check if you have a distribution folder in the Firefox installation folder with a policies.json file.
選擇的解決方法
Yeah. There was a Distribution folder in the C:\Mozilla Firefox folder. I deleted it and the json file in it, and that message is gone now.
I just have no idea how that suddenly got in there. I've always been using Windows 10's own Security Suite, not any other antivirus or internet security software.