There is no "right" way when it comes to feet position. It will vary with the style of squat you are doing which is directly associated with your intent.
For example, an equipped powerlifter will have a wide stance as that's the position that will put all the pressure on the hips which is what the compression suit is supporting. A raw lifter will have a moderate stance. An olympic lifter will have a narrow stance. Gym rats will probably use the moderate stance or, if they specifically want to target the quads, a narrow stance.
Depending on the stance, your toes should be pointed in the direction in which your knee will travel. So, a wide stance squatter will have the toes pointed out because that's where the knee is going. An olympic lifter will have their toes pointing almost dead straight ahead because that's where the knee is going.
So, figure out the foot position that best suits what you are wanting to accomplish. That normally would mean a moderate, shoulder width or a fraction wider stance with the knees turned out a bit to be in line with the knee as it travels during the squat.
That is the safest way to protect the knee. If your toes are pointing out too wide, the knees will tend to cave inwards, taking the tension out of your glutes and making your squat weaker.
If you have a wide stance with the toes pointing forward, you will put a huge shear force on your ankle and have your knee hanging outside your foot, ready to pop all those juicy tendons in there.
Front squats are a quad dominant exercise so you would use a narrow olympic stance with toes almost pointing directly forward.
Moderate squat stance with toes pointing in line with knee travel:
The wide and narrow stance:
Super narrow stance, not recommended but worth looking at for a while: