• victorstanciu 4 hours ago

    This is great news, thank you, I was just thinking how much I'd like some affiliate links in my browser. Also many thanks for all the telemetry improvements listed in the changelog, those are also something I've been looking forward to for a long time. If this doesn't solve Firefox's abysmal market share, I don't know what will!

    • bachmeier 2 hours ago

      The important thing is that this allows them to avoid making a paid version of Firefox available to those that want to support it, or even taking donations that go to Firefox development. Because...I'm sure they have reasons.

      • viraptor 3 hours ago

        > Also many thanks for all the telemetry improvements listed in the changelog, those are also something I've been looking forward to for a long time. If this doesn't solve Firefox's abysmal market share, I don't know what will!

        Telemetry is how they figure out popular or blocked addons, failing pages, browser crashes, etc. Part of a managing popular software is indeed getting information like that. Because general public isn't keen on filling out forms by hand.

        • Y_Y 2 hours ago

          People on HN don't object to telemetry because they don't know what it might be used for. It's patronizing and useless to just respond with a naive psuedo-explanation.

          • bravetraveler 2 hours ago

            +1, very patronizing and misleading. I dare say harmful, not useless. Plants seeds for the same tired arguments. Again. Helpful, not required.

            edit: My 'argument' against it: when is enough? At what point does it become bike-shedding? Tricky to answer; isn't one.

            I'm for Telemetry, generally, but enjoy the universal ability to opt out. Either through your mechanisms or mine. At a point it becomes a matter of trust and need. More feedback loops, if you will.

            Trust isn't necessarily regarding privacy, either. What about simple efficacy? For all of the Telemetry today, I don't see substantially more-effective software than what we had in the 1980s. More profit, sure - but not necessarily effective or reliable. I often don't trust Telemetry is going to good (read: effective) use.

            The requirements/standards between a mobile game powered by endorphins and say, a web browser, are considerably different. Sorry, they were patronizing first.

            • viraptor an hour ago

              Then the same people shouldn't make fun of telemetry as unrelated to the success of a product. Also, yes, I had this exchange with many people who don't understand what telemetry is used for, here on HN. HN is big enough that generalising the audience just doesn't work anymore.

              • stavros 2 hours ago

                Why do they object? What's objectionable about Mozilla knowing what features someone anonymous uses?

                • perihelions an hour ago

                  Lack of express consent.

                  No one on HN has any objection to explicit opt-in usage statistics. Telemetry is not the problem. Lack of consent is the problem. Software developers sliding themselves into end users' local machines without invitation is the problem—devs who feel entitled to take things, simply because they have the technical access to take them. And devs who don't even understand the difference.

                  • emptiestplace an hour ago

                    > No one on HN

                    Absolutely, let's keep this pattern going!

                    • perihelions an hour ago

                      I don't understand your comment? To clarify my own: it's my observation that I've never seen anyone on HN utter a word against opt-in telemetry models, like the one Debian uses.

                      Of all the diverse viewpoints, FOSS extremists and privacy fundamentalists, the core facet of "you can submit statistics to our popularity survey if you want" is not something I've ever seen anyone object to. The objections are always to some other facet of telemetry.

                  • bayindirh an hour ago

                    First, fingerprinting & correlation is real, and it's easier than ever because of the identifiers tools collect, and correlating is cheap because we have tons of GPUs for cheap now.

                    On the other hand, I personally don't like a pair of eyes looking over my shoulder, physical or digital.

                    People don't understand or don't want to understand that digital telemetry is not different from somebody looking over your shoulder, taking notes, and making "Mhm..." sounds.

                    When done without consent, both are equally invading personal space, and I don't want my personal space to be invaded like that, as a person on HN, who understands what telemetry is.

                    • stavros an hour ago

                      Why don't you consent?

                      • bayindirh an hour ago

                        Part social contract, part the knowledge of what I can do with that data.

                        You know, somebody coming to your cubicle and taking something without asking is rude, in some cases unethical, even damaging. It's the same thing with computers. No application/website ever should be able to collect information about me without my consent. It's called a "personal computer".

                        If the application needs telemetry from me, they can ask (not tell we're doing this, but ask), and start the moment I consent. The moment I withdraw my consent all telemetry and data collection should stop. Moreover, I shall be able to see all the telemetry data in its full glory to make my own assessment of what's collected and how.

                        If you don't know, Go tried this, even with an arguable provable way of anonymization, people roared back, and the decision is changed to "opt-in".

                        For some applications, I explicitly consent to telemetry because a) They ask, b) They show what they collect and do with it, and c) I do respect and trust them because of the previous encounters I had with them.

                        The moment they break this social contract, they lose telemetry, and in most cases me as a user.

                        ...and I have nothing to hide.

                        • bravetraveler 37 minutes ago

                          Child: "I'll be able to run so fast with those light-up shoes"

                          Parent: "You bet, champ." <buys shoes>

                          Child: <Same speed, but happy>

                          Or a perhaps more familiar metaphor: rearranging deckchairs on the Titanic.

                          Telemetry can absolutely be useful. It can also be a toil fountain. To your point, how they behave/use this matters.

                          • bayindirh 32 minutes ago

                            I mean, non-consensual telemetry is just recording what you do via your camera all day long, but with light off, without telling you. Replace the camera with any app you use.

                            Are you comfortable and happy now?

                            Of course it can be useful & good, but letting people know about what you are doing and asking before doing it is even better, no?

                            Do the telemetry collectors have something to hide, so they do it covertly or without consent?

                            • bravetraveler 28 minutes ago

                              +1 - I'm one of the few people who actually reads the source code before I build/use software :)

                              I won't say I've read all of it, of course: the distribution does a lot of work for me [with earned trust]. I'll risk Fedora over BigCo whims any day.

                • mossTechnician 19 minutes ago

                  Collecting data for advertisers was also put under the "telemetry" umbrella with PPA.

                  https://github.com/mozilla/policy-templates/issues/1130#issu...

                  • sabbaticaldev an hour ago

                    come on, firefox been neglecting users request for the past 5 years. They know what’s wrong and don’t plan to change, stop being so lenient

                • mafriese 4 hours ago

                  This is perfect advertising for the Ladybird browser. I hope that some of the developers (if this really goes live on the release channel) will join other projects. I can understand that Mozilla needs money, but I don't think this feature fits with Firefox and what it stands for.

                  • Y_Y 2 hours ago

                    It's bad press for Firefox, but honestly it just makes me want to use the internet less. Ladybird is cool, but the incompatibility with badly-made websites only intensifies the more niche your browser gets. Librewolf or the resurrected Sero browser feels like the next best thing, but even so it feels like a losing battle.

                  • krelian 2 hours ago

                    Criticizing is easy, I'd like all critics to suggest alternatives to how FF development should be funded. I don't like this at all but I also cannot come up with any realistic alternatives.

                    • noirscape an hour ago

                      For one, it would probably help a lot if Mozilla didn't try to be everything at once. They have a specific product niche, but both Firefox and Thunderbird (both of which should be their core development efforts), just don't seem to be what they're focusing on, instead seeming to thinking they have to be the EFF... before MBA rot seems to have kicked in and now Mozilla is a non-profit that owns an internet ad company (whilst deprioritizing and scaling back a bunch of the advocacy efforts that could upset advertisers. It's kinda funny that they're torpedoing their EFF-esque advocacy to invest into a business sector whose core existence runs contrary to their purpose.)

                      And that's before we dive into just how much they pay their executives and how much they could probably cut into the executive salaries to fund Firefox and Thunderbird before resorting to sponsorship deals.

                      The Mozilla Foundation isn't the most disconnected free software org where I have the suspicion that a lot of money is being spent on unnecessary side projects or funneled into rainy day funds while begging on the streets like they're poor (they're guilty of the former, they spend too much for the latter), but make no mistake - every major cut in their own browser market share was of their own making. And it's always tied to harebrained schemes to try and inject sponsored shit into Firefox. (Their original major dent that wasn't just gradual decline/rebalance due to Chrome entering the Browser market originated from Mozilla installing a tie-in extension with the show "Mr Robot".)

                      • Certhas an hour ago

                        A lot of statements you throw out here are demonstrably false. It appears that you haven't tried in the least to actually become informed on this topic, and just spout the same tired talking points.

                        I am critical of some things that Mozilla does, but shouting blatant falsehoods and repeating "exec salary" ad nauseam is not helpful.

                        I just posted this the other day:

                        Firefox is massively profitable, (with a rising share of income not coming from Google). Change in net assets before taxes in 2022 was +168 M$, it was +220 M$ in 2021. This is on expenses of 425 M$ in 2022.

                        Software development was 220 out of the total expenses. General and administrative coming in second at 108 M$.

                        I don't know exactly what comparable software companies invest, but assuming that the 220 is entirely SWE salaries this seems appropriate overhead to my mind.

                        Marketing and Branding is next with 58M$ other program services come in at 34 M$.

                        https://assets.mozilla.net/annualreport/2022/mozilla-fdn-202...

                        So yes, Mozilla could drop all income generating activities other than Google without having to cut anything in development. That means staying dependent on selling the search bar to the largest and most invasive advertisment company there has ever been forever.

                        Instead, they are running a strategy that seems to aim to get independent of Google money as quickly as possible: Build up a war chest, increase other revenue streams. Other revenues are up to 75M$ in 2022 from 56M$ in 2021.

                        So looking at the actual figures, rather than making stuff up out of nowhere, it does not seem to me that you can accuse them for a lack of strategic focus. Nor have you articulated the actual trade-off they are facing: Rely on Google money or get better at monetizing Firefox in other ways.

                        Instead you straw-man their activism and make completely unfounded and implausible statements: "every major cut in their own browser market share was of their own making." I am sure that Google using their Web properties and massive ad campaigns to push Chrome and Microsoft using Windows to push Edge had no impact whatsoever.

                      • cess11 an hour ago

                        Voluntarily.

                        • wccrawford an hour ago

                          I agree.

                          I see far too many people essentially saying, "If it wasn't funded unethically, it couldn't exist!" Or "my business needs to do [unethical thing] or I can't compete!"

                          Okay, then it shouldn't exist. That's not an excuse.

                          • noirscape an hour ago

                            The irony is that if Mozilla had just taken the search deal money over the past decade and a half and quietly kept it away in a rainy day fund instead of wasting it all on ideas that mostly didn't go anywhere or reinvented the wheel from existing projects, they probably would be just fine for the rest of their lifetimes.

                            The only reason they're looking for unethical funding is because a. Mozilla has grown so bloated beyond it's original purpose that they have ludicrous operating demands and b. because they have a bunch of MBA types in charge who can only think up the most unethical schemes you can think of to make money.

                        • wiether an hour ago
                          • The_Rob an hour ago

                            I agree, but this limited to macOS and iOS. Not helpful to most people.

                            • wiether an hour ago

                              OP was asking for alternatives in funding, not just straight FF alternatives; I agree that Orion is not, at the moment, an alternative to FF!

                              /comment posted with FF on Windows

                        • greyadept 3 hours ago

                          The top item in the "Gifts They'll Love" list is a beanie that scores a solid F on Fakespot: https://www.fakespot.com/product/etsfmoa-unisex-beanie-with-...

                          • markstos 2 hours ago

                            and the multi-cooker in the screenshot was not an Instant Pot. Disappointed.

                          • infotainment 2 hours ago

                            Presenting: a real-world preview of what Chrome will inevitably transform into if it is spun into an independent entity.

                            • sabbaticaldev an hour ago

                              that would be a game-changer and actually help firefox find real revenue stream

                              • Spivak 2 hours ago

                                Yeah, amateur honestly. You're supposed to hide the browser ads in the search engine results like a real company.

                              • not_your_vase 6 hours ago

                                And the example is "Kodak Printomatic Full-Color Instant Print Digital Camera". An absolute Chinese dumpster-filling, for Kodak price. And the off-brand JBL headset, with affiliate link! Nice, this is much better than having an advocacy department.

                                • netsharc 3 hours ago

                                  Firefox was open-sourced when Netscape was bought by AOL. It seems like they're now on their way to offering their own AOL experience.

                                  And I guess my references only make sense to "geriatic" millennials and older..

                                  • wilsonjholmes 2 hours ago

                                    I've read some ESR, so I'm tracking (:

                                    (I am quite young so I have to rely on seminal texts for my historical knowledge)

                                    • pjmlp 2 hours ago

                                      It made full sense to me. :)

                                    • asteriske an hour ago

                                      Is there a straightforward way to move an about:config to a new install? The number of things I require to be disabled or changed is mounting and I'm not looking forward to putting Firefox on a new machine.

                                      • nalinidash 8 hours ago

                                        Firefox nightly will be running an experiment in December featuring a Fakespot feed in the vertical list on newtab. This list will show products that have been identified as high-quality, and with reliable product reviews. They will link to more detailed Fakespot product pages that will give a breakdown of the product analysis.

                                        • Pooge 3 hours ago

                                          Use Librewolf and never go back. How people keep up with Mozilla's bullshit is beyond me.

                                          Can't wait for the Ladybird alpha release.

                                          • mnmalst 3 hours ago

                                            I agree with the sentiment but ladybird is years and years away from being on par with Firefox. Performance, compatibility let alone extensions are far away at this point. Exiting to see the development tho.

                                            • prox 2 hours ago

                                              It was true Blender as well. No one would touch it, and it has bright future now. We gotta be patient.

                                          • undefined an hour ago
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