Super fast Goanna-based browser designed for the best possible performance

Pale Moon (32-bit)

Pale Moon 31.4.2 (32-bit)

  -  29.48 MB  -  Open Source

Sometimes latest versions of the software can cause issues when installed on older devices or devices running an older version of the operating system.

Software makers usually fix these issues but it can take them some time. What you can do in the meantime is to download and install an older version of Pale Moon 31.4.2 (32-bit).


For those interested in downloading the most recent release of Pale Moon (32-bit) or reading our review, simply click here.


All old versions distributed on our website are completely virus-free and available for download at no cost.


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  • Pale Moon 31.4.2 (32-bit) Screenshots

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    Pale Moon 31.4.2 (32-bit) Screenshot 1
  • Pale Moon 31.4.2 (32-bit) Screenshot 2
  • Pale Moon 31.4.2 (32-bit) Screenshot 3

What's new in this version:

Changes/fixes:
- Fixed JPEG-XL's transparency display for images with an alpha channel
- Temporarily removed regex lookbehind to stop crashes occurring on 32-bit builds of the browser
- Added some extra sanity checks to our zip/jar/xpi reader to avoid issues with corrupt archives
- Aligned cookie checks with RFC 6265 bis. See implementation notes
- Removed obsolete code in Windows widgets that could cause potential issues with long paths and file names on supported versions
- Fixed several crashes
- Security issues addressed: CVE-2022-46876, CVE-2022-46874 and several others that do not have a CVE number
- UXP Mozilla security patch summary: 4 fixed, 20 not applicable

Implementation notes:
- RFC 6265 has been worked on with draft changes describing how cookies are actually being handled in the real world, in the bis versions of the RFC. While these changes have not yet been finalized, browsers in general do adhere to the latest available bis version of this RFC. Specifically, the long-standing exceptions for cookie names and values have been formalized, e.g. having quoted values. Our behavior has changed in that we now once again accept Tab characters (0x09) which is the one excluded control character from the range that is otherwise forbidden. We also no longer apply these checks exclusively to those in http headers, and any way of setting cookies must now adhere to the valid range. Cookies that fail these range checks for valid characters will be ignored.