Thanks everyone for your active participation here. We knew this would have a lot of interest and so we’ve waited to dive into the conversation because we see some themes emerging that I’ll respond to broadly here. The main concerns I’m noting are around the license agreements we declare, our use of data for AI, and our Acceptable Use Policy. Below are a few clarifications to each of these areas.

  • ugjka@lemmy.world
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    15 hours ago

    Switched to Waterfox right away. There are other forks i’ll consider if waterfox also tries to pull the AI uno card as well. Chromium crap is out of question because of manifest 3

    • Tangent5280@lemmy.world
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      22 minutes ago

      Do you think Librewolf is a valid alternative? I’d like to keep using it but obviously I wouldn’t want to if it doesn’t live up to it’s name.

    • DarkSpectrum@lemmy.world
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      9 hours ago

      Waterfox migrator here too. I’m considering a monthly $ membership to Waterfox because it’s getting harder to find a browser that doesn’t want to cloud capitalise my usage.

  • CosmicTurtle0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 day ago

    I feel for Ashley here. She likely had no say in the matter and is being tasked to defend this change.

    There is only one way to fix this short term which is to roll back the TOS.

    Long term would be to guarantee to keep the MPL as the governing license for both the source code and executable.

    Acceptable solution would be severely limit the license users would have to give to Mozilla, both time bound and use bound.

    you hereby grant us a nonexclusive, royalty-free, worldwide limited, royalty-free license, used for the duration explicitly necessary to allow Firefox to use that information to help you navigate, experience, and interact with online content as you indicate with your use of Firefox, not to exceed execution duration of the browser, or one day, whichever is shorter.

    But again, absolutely no license should be necessary. The browser is not a legal entity and I should not need to give Mozilla a license for my data.

  • pory@lemmy.world
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    16 hours ago

    So, how painless is the transition from heavily customized and extended Firefox Developer Edition to Waterfox? Do I lose CSS support for multi-row tabs or compatibility with any extensions attained from the Mozilla store?

    I already don’t maintain a Mozilla account or use any form of syncing, so “losing” that won’t matter.

  • tiramichu@lemm.ee
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    2 days ago

    “It does NOT give us ownership of your data”

    Then why did it say that it does?

    “When you upload or input information through Firefox, you hereby grant us a nonexclusive, royalty-free, worldwide license to use that information to help you navigate, experience, and interact with online content as you indicate with your use of Firefox.”

    If we insist on having terms at all, then GOOD and user-respecting terms are ones which list clearly, precisely and exhaustively exactly what data will be used for what purpose under what circumstance.

    BAD and corporate-favouring terms are ones which make broad, sweeping statements which can be interpreted any way the company likes in their favour - and where changes to how and what data is shared and transmitted can be made any time without updating the terms, because the terms are so broad they cover just about anything.

    Pretty clear which one of those things the new terms are.

    • CosmicTurtle0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 day ago

      This is exactly why I don’t believe a single word they say about this new TOS.

      Their MPL2 was perfectly fine. Moving their executable to a proprietary license with less freedoms was not going to go well.

    • Billiam@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Uhh, because without letting Firefox use the information you type, you would have a very shitty word processor instead of a web browser?

      Imaging typing “www.google.com” and Firefox just sits there because without your permission to use the data you gave it, Firefox would ethically not be able send that text to a DNS server.

      That’s what that means.

      • tiramichu@lemm.ee
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        1 day ago

        When you interact with your web browser as an application, the information you put into it - including any DNS queries or submitted data - is routed between your ISP, your DNS provider, and the provider of the website. And for non-mozilla websites then none of those are Mozilla.

        “Firefox” as a browser sees that stuff, but “Mozilla” as an organisation, a busineas entity, does not need to see that.

        Exactly the same that when you buy a bicycle you can ride it anywhere you like without the company who made the bike knowing where you are - sure they made the bike, but after that point, the relationship is over.

        This is why historically there has not been any need to accept terms for a browser, because a browser is just a vehicle - what you use the browser for has actually no dependency with the company who made it.

        A policy only starts to become necessary when the browser positions itself as an entity that you transact with directly; like creating an account to sync data with Mozilla services and store things in pocket, or to interact with AI services which Mozilla provides.

        Effectively, mozilla have now started adding extra features to the bicycle which are useful but also need to communicate with Bike HQ to work. And they are being a little less than specific about what data that is or what they will do with it.

        That’s what data usage policies are about - what data does Mozilla as an organisation collect, what do they use it for, and what third parties do they interact with to provide those services. And that’s what I’d hope to see, rather than a broad statement that in theory allows anything.

        • Billiam@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          That’s the thing: you do interact with the web browser. It’s literally the first thing that has to happen before accessing the Internet.

          You don’t type directly into Facebook; you don’t search Google directly. You type into a text box in web page rendered by your browser. Your browser handles the HTTPS encryption as well as sending everything you type to the next layer in the network stack. That’s what Mozilla’s policy is clarifying- the very act of typing data into Firefox means you’re giving data to Firefox, so they’re telling you what happens to that data when you do (which is not “send it to Mozilla”).

          • tiramichu@lemm.ee
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            1 day ago

            That’s what Mozilla’s response to the recent criticism tried to explain this as being, but that response itself is to me not at all plausible.

            You do not need to give Firefox or Mozilla permission to “do” anything when you simply navigate to a website or perform a search, because the only entities involved in that transaction are yourself, your ISP and the website. NOT Mozilla.

            To be super clear here: Yes, Firefox as an installed application has complete and total access and permission on anything you ever do or say or send, and always has done since day 1. And that is absolutely fine, because that data did not go back to Mozilla.

            That’s how its been with web browsers since the web browser was invented - you don’t have to agree to let the browser do things for you, because just like a bike you are the one driving the browser and deciding where it goes and what requests the broswer makes when you drive it - you are in control.

            The new terms and conditions have been added to cover data which is sent back from the browser to Mozilla, or to other partner services.

            • acockworkorange@mander.xyz
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              22 hours ago

              Your previous response couldn’t be more clear. At this point this guy is just trolling, and it’s never a good idea to feed trolls.

            • Billiam@lemmy.world
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              1 day ago

              You do not need to give Firefox or Mozilla permission to “do” anything when you simply navigate to a website or perform a search, because the only entities involved in that transaction are yourself, your ISP and the website. NOT Mozilla.

              Again, as I’ve already pointed out this is not correct. You don’t interact with websites directly; you interact with them through your web browser.

              To be super clear here: Yes, Firefox as an installed application has complete and total access and permission on anything you ever do or say or send, and always has done since day 1. And that is absolutely fine, because that data did not go back to Mozilla.

              Except you don’t know that. You can’t say what expectations you might have had with whatever data you provided because there was no policy published to say what Mozilla might have done with it. Now, there is.

      • grue@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        You need to understand that what you wrote is utter bullshit and not how any of this works, or has ever worked.

        Mozilla is not the software running on your computer and you having some sort of agreement with them is not even slightly required for the software running locally to connect to the third-party server that you, the user, directed it to connect to.

        Adding Mozilla ToS to Firefox is like putting “vegan” labels on tomatoes: it’s not just pointless, but also suspicious.

    • HouseWolf@lemm.ee
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      1 day ago

      Waterfox is the safe bet, it’s basically just regular Firefox repacked with better defaults and telemetry turned off, but it isn’t harden or has add-ons included.

      LibreWolf is what I switched to over a year ago, The team behind it have been pretty thorough in scraping out spyware and it comes pre-hardened out the box (but that can break more invasive websites).

    • simple@lemm.ee
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      2 days ago

      They’re opt-in by default, it’s not like they’re forcing AI on you.

        • TriflingToad@sh.itjust.works
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          23 hours ago

          idk why people are downvoting, it’s exactly what has happened with literally every bad policy online anywhere. They beta test it to gauge how bad backlash would be, then if it’s acceptable go ahead with it, if too much backlash just use the “oh it was just a beta! we would never do that 🥺” excuse then in 6 months try again

          Edit: the Lemmy hive mind has reversed their decision. It was at +4 | -4 when I replied

        • The Quuuuuill@slrpnk.net
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          1 day ago

          Well that’s kind of all any gecko based browser can ever be. The way gecko’s written, it’s a lot more locked into the rest of firefox than Chromium’s web engine