We've heard the concerns about how Zendesk works with browsers that block third-party cookies. Not the most elegant solution, but it's better than having to keep opening another browser specifically configured with less safe settings just to be able to access Zendesk. Once it reloads without the warning, I just turn the restrictions back on again. You can now disable the "Disable Cross-Origin Restrictions" to return Safari to its safe state, and in my case, I've been able to use Zendesk fine during that session.Ĥ) It does seem that I need to enable "Disable Cross-Origin Restrictions" each time I sign in, but that's only for that sign-in page. It should then return to the main sign-in page without the warning. It will ask you if you want to allow the site (likely something like ) to allow cookies from another domain (zendesk). Enter your credentials to complete logging in to Zendesk and click Sign in.Īfter more than a year of no longer having Zendesk access due to this issue, even following the updated directions of the article above, I was able to get it working by doing the following:ġ) In Safari menu, select "Preferences" and then click on the last tab "Advanced" and select the last item in the bottom "Show Develop menu in menu bar."Ģ) When on your Zendesk login page with the "Cookies required" warning across the top of the page, select Menu > Develop > Disable Cross-Origin Restrictions:ģ) Now click on the "Continue" link in the yellow warning box in the login page.The page reloads again, and there are no longer any warning messages displayed. Choose Allow in the Safari dialog box to allow Zendesk to use cookies and website data while browsing the domain.You will be prompted by a Safari dialog box whether or not to allow cookies to be used by your Zendesk domain. On the sign-in page, again click Continue.On the Safari cookie requirements page, click Continue to acknowledge the requirement.In the Cookies required to use Safari box, click Continue.Ī new page displays information about the cookie requirements.To continue signing in using Safari, you will authorize cookies to be stored on your device. The sign in page displays a warning that cookies are required to use Safari. Navigate to your Zendesk sign in page using a Safari browser.To log in to Zendesk using a Safari browser This behavior will be the same for agents and administrators. While logging in, you will have to acknowledge several prompts to indicate your acceptance of cookies in the browser. To address the impact of cookie restrictions in Safari browsers, Zendesk has introduced a new flow that recognizes when you are using a Safari browser on a host-mapped domain and prompts you to authorize Zendesk to use cookies. In turn, restricting cookie usage has an impact on many popular, browser-based applications, including Zendesk. To protect personal information, these safeguards can restrict how first-party and third-party cookies are recognized and used in the browser. It was working fine one minute and the next minute it's not working.Recent versions of Apple Safari browsers include Apple’s Intelligent Tracking Prevention (ITP) safeguards. There are no error messages in the browser console. Creating a fresh Firefox profile didn't help. Both are having the same problem and both run off of different profiles.
I run Firefox release and Firefox Developer Edition on this computer.
#Can t download firefox windows 10#
I'm on Windows 10 running from a local account. Here are the things I've already tried:Ĭhecking for Parental Controls (I don't appear to have any). If I right click an image and save it, the download manager says it failed, but the file actually downloads correctly. A 0 byte file with the correct file name is created in the correct download folder. Randomly out of the blue, Firefox no longer downloads files.