-.TH lariza 1 "2020-04-29" "lariza" "User Commands"
+.TH lariza 1 "2020-05-03" "lariza" "User Commands"
.\" --------------------------------------------------------------------
.SH NAME
lariza.usage \- extended usage hints
make sure to link them to the directory mentioned above.
.\" --------------------------------------------------------------------
.SH "TRUSTED CERTIFICATES"
-By default, \fBlariza\fP trusts whatever CAs are trusted by WebKit, i.e.
-by your GnuTLS installation. If you wish to trust additional
-certificates, such as self-signed certificates, the first thing you
-should do is try to add the appropriate CAs to your system-wide store.
+By default, \fBlariza\fP trusts whatever CAs are trusted by WebKit. If
+you wish to trust additional certificates, such as self-signed
+certificates, the first thing you should do is try to add the
+appropriate CAs to your system-wide store.
.P
If you wish to add simple exceptions, you can grab the certificate and
store it in the directory \fI~/.config/lariza/certs\fP. The filename
user-specified certificates if the server's certificate can be validated
by any system-wide CA.
.\" --------------------------------------------------------------------
-.SH "WEBKIT LOCAL STORAGE"
-WebKit does create files in your $\fBXDG_*\fP directories, i.e.
-\fI~/.local/share\fP or \fI~/.cache\fP. It's up to you what you want to
-do with this junk. I remove it regularly when no WebKit browser is
-running. Another option would be to change the $\fBXDG_*\fP variables.
-.P
-I have explicitly not turned off the local storage feature in WebKit
-because I don't know if this breaks web applications.
-.\" --------------------------------------------------------------------
.SH "SEE ALSO"
.BR lariza (1).