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For me, I can't even has that ability. It seems there is another setting in that browser to allow that flexibility.
As for the prefs.js, I did also try that. It is also a no go for me as I can't have this dialog to appear to let me confirm that I want to run it.
----
You do understand that security features are designed exactly to thwart your intended purpose, right?
IOW: trust is not *supposed* to be baseless. You either have to sign on the server side (announce who you are) OR allow explicit action on the client side admitting your entry (agree to allow the code to run, either by setting/preference or user action).
This isn't weird or an accident.
The rule of "same origin" is sort of a shortcut that is allowed under certain circumstances, and not in all environments. For example, if I remember correctly, some versions of the Flash client allow cross-site posting from Flash script and some don't.
Sometimes it's possible for your code to be seen as "same origin" if you write it slightly differently or if the two items come from two different sub-domains, although how it works is still at the discretion of the client. I can't tell whether this might be an option for you?
>L
.Signature
{
margin-top: 12px;
color: #666666;
}
.Signature a
{
color: #666666;
}
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