That’s generally not how this works. Firefox doesn’t send what you’re typing to the website. Whoever developed the website made JavaScript that monitors the input for changes, and then sends a request to the host with the changes. To Firefox, this is simply two, non suspicious events. The JavaScript wants to see what is typed - that’s reasonable, could be to do some processing or update some text on the website. The website wants to make a http request - also totally fine, could be an API query for a search. There would be no reliable way to stop a website from sending what you type back to the host.
Firefox
A place to discuss the news and latest developments on the open-source browser Firefox
Open notepad or similar locally, write your message, think about it, delete, go back and edit, when you’re ready, copy and paste into the chat window. You can save your side of the chat so that you have a record of what you said.
It's pretty standard to send keypresses to the backend before the user hits submit (otherwise search boxes couldn't do auto completion for example)
You could maybe write an extension that tries to detect the difference between this and a 'full submit' (and block those network requests) but I bet it would be very unreliable
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You would need to write in notepad and paste it into the chat box after or something like that.
When you type into a website running JS for a chatbox, there's no way for firefox to prevent that text being sent right away.