Not sure how it compares to chrome but firefox does have a solid open tab search.
You can either click "list all tabs" button (down arrow to the right of the new tab button) and then "search tabs" or enter "%" as the first character in the address bar followed by your search term.
As far as I know there is no keyboard shortcut for it.
Yeah, I know about that. It's unfortunately not as snappy or usable as Chrome's, because you can't activate the search with a single key combination. The item focus behavior is also distracting: when you type in your search, the best match is not automatically focused, so you have to press the down arrow key and then press enter to activate it. In Chrome, you just press Ctrl+Shift+A, type in the search, and press enter (99 % of the time). So for the whole process, Firefox has two extra steps. It ends up being a lot because I use this feature dozens of times in a day.
They changed the official named from "address bar" to "location bar" ages ago when they added functionality like that, and to go with the new name, "ctrl + l" is a shortcut for it.
Netscape always called the url bar the "location bar". "Address bar" is Internet Explorer's term. (At some point Netscape/Mozilla copied the ctrl+d shortcut for A_d_dress from IE as well.)
I have two .in domains with namecheap and whois data is all "REDACTED FOR PRIVACY" despite namecheap not allowing me to add domain privacy when I purchased the domains.
I’ve looked into it a bit more, and turns out there are two options for redacting WHOIS data:
- “Privacy service”, which is these funky named LLCs replacing your data in the WHOIS
- Just the redaction, which replaces almost all data with REDACTED FOR PRIVACY (except for registrant's country, state, and organization name).
No idea why or how any of this works! Apparently, Porkbun does both: on my another domain, aedge.dev, it shows REDACTED FOR PRIVACY and replaces org name with “Private by Design, LLC”. For notpushk.in, it does show my country (RU... looks like I haven’t updated my address in a while lol) but everything else is redacted, too.
Spaceship on the other hand doesn’t bother and returns only this tiny response:
Domain Name: lunni.dev
Registry Domain ID: 4AF9AE073-DEV
Registrar WHOIS Server: whois.nic.google
Registrar URL: None
Updated Date: 2025-03-10T13:01:35Z
Creation Date: 2022-12-11T02:30:54Z
Registry Expiry Date: 2025-12-11T02:30:54Z
Registrar: Spaceship, Inc.
Registrar IANA ID: 3862
Registrar Abuse Contact Email: abuse@spaceship.com
Registrar Abuse Contact Phone: +1.6027723958
Domain Status: clientTransferProhibited https://icann.org/epp#clientTransferProhibited
Name Server: coco.bunny.net
Name Server: kiki.bunny.net
DNSSEC: unsigned
URL of the ICANN Whois Inaccuracy Complaint Form: https://www.icann.org/wicf/
>>> Last update of WHOIS database: 2025-03-17T17:11:09Z <<<
Edit: or, rather, that’s what whois.nic.google returns for a domain registered in Spaceship.
Something I've been wondering about lately - maybe you have some insight into how this works?
The .in TLD doesn't allow privacy protection as seen in the list you linked above but whois still shows "Redacted for Privacy Purposes" for everything but the country and state/province of the registrant.
I'm not sure about .in specifically, but it is worth noting that the information you are required to provide to register a domain and the information that is published on WHOIS is not necessarily the same.
It may not be exactly what you have in mind but there is an interesting extension along similar lines (mostly for chrome) called TabFS that mounts your open tabs as a filesystem...