• paultimate14@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    I’ve seen predictions of Firefox’s downfall for decades. Still waiting for it to happen.

    It’s really easy to see the headlines saying things like “Firefox is tracking it’s users and violating their privacy!!!” And panic. But digging into the latest “scandal” (the PPA), it seems like Firefox is behaving pretty reasonably.

    One of the main criticisms is that it’s opt-out instead of opt-in. Which… I kind of agree with Mozilla on. 99% of users aren’t going to know or care about this, and the 1% that do are the kind of people who probably would have extensions to disable it or just use some obscure ultra-private browser instead.

    I don’t fault NOYB for bringing it up either. It’s good to have organizations like that keeping an eye out for everyone.

    But I also get worried that sometimes communies attack their closest allies for being imperfect harder than enemies actively working against their interests.

    • FeelzGoodMan420@eviltoast.org
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      3 months ago

      For whatever reason Lemmy seems to have an anti-firefox agenda. They make some good points but most of the posts on Lemmy are just pure emotion, speculations, and FUD.

    • jqubed@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      I was an early adopter of Firefox 20+ years ago. It started going downhill more than 15 years ago and I bailed to Chrome when that launched. It really was better than Firefox at the time. Then Chrome got worse and I wound up back on Firefox, not because Firefox had gotten better in that time but because everything else had gotten worse than Firefox in the intervening time. Also, if going from 48% market share in 2009 to a barely relevant <5% in 2024 doesn’t count as a downfall I’m not sure what does.

    • TrickDacy@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      The sanest take yet. If this were reddit and gold meant anything, you’d deserve it

    • marcos@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      If they were violating people’s privacy, it would be completely unacceptable to make it opt-out.

      But they aren’t. They are doing things that some people believe they’ll want to violate people’s privacy in the future to do in a different way.

      • naught101@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        I didn’t know what it was, so I looked it up. Their description is here:

        https://blog.mozilla.org/netpolicy/2024/08/22/ppa-update/

        It sounds interesting… It also sounds like it will fail, because Mozilla seems to think that trackers are primarily interested in collecting ad stats, and that targeted advertising is less critical, but I think in reality it’s the other way around, and advertisers won’t accept such a limited solution.

        • Starbuncle@lemmy.ca
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          3 months ago

          I see no benefit to this because it will never be used instead of traditional tracking. It will just be a way for advertisers to get data from people who are blocking normal trackers and get even more data from people who aren’t.

        • marcos@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          Oh, I wish them the best and hope they succeed.

          But I also think they’ll fail. And not even for that one reason, I think there are enough advertisers not interested on tracking to make it succeed. I just think they’ll flounder it. What is too bad, because they are the ones best positioned to make it.

    • Katana314@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      The most fragile thing to me is their funding stream, which may even serve as a source of enshittification demands, implemented as subtly as possible.

    • drkt@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      3 months ago

      PPA works for ad networks and not users. I don’t care about your ‘moderate take’ about a technology invented by the actual opposition who would strip-mine your corpse for minerals if they were given the opportunity just because it’s not as evil as it could be. It is still evil technology that works against you.

    • cm0002@lemmy.worldOP
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      3 months ago

      I’m just following the warning signs, in the last year:

      There’s the news of the opt-out only on tracking as you brought up. Then they fired one of their open source executives because he had the audacity to get cancer. Then they acquired an ad company because “we’re built different and we can fix her and totally not get corrupted by ads in the process”. Then the AI shit oh and ofc the news where they almost sucked Putin’s dick and pulled FF from being accessible in Russia for a day or 2

      And a bunch of other stuff that I’m probably forgetting about. And that’s just within the last year.

      Google and Chrome were great to! Until they weren’t. FF probably won’t ever actually die, not for a while at least. But the User and Privacy first aspects certainly will. They’ll probably succumb to enshittification and become like any other corporate browser like Chrome or Edge for years to come.

      • paultimate14@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Ah I just searched for Firefox news and the PPA thing was the only one that came up.

        As for firing the executive, I can’t find anything about him being specifically relayed to being open-source anything. Steve Teixeira was their Chief Product Office briefly- he only was hired in 2022 and left the company a few months ago, and prior to that he worked for Facebook, Microsoft, and Twitter. So I don’t think this can really be framed as some attack on open-source or privacy. If the allegations are true that they discriminated against him for having cancer that’s shitty of course, but Mozilla has of course claimed that they did not and it’s going to court. They didn’t fire him either- they asked him to take a demotion to Senior VP of Technology Strategy and he chose to leave instead.

        Yes Mozilla bought an ad company. They’re called Anonym and their stated goal is to provide an advertising service that can exist profitably without violating privacy. I hate ads- I block as many as I can and I use a pi-hole. I avoid ad-supported services as much as possible. I’m also privileged enough that I can afford to pay for a subscription to a lot of stuff or just buy physical media to rip and store on my own server. But there was a time when I was a broke college student stuck using campus Internet and playing by their rules, so the safest option I could afford was just to watch ads. Ads can be an ethical business model that helps improve the lives of low-income households. For people with legal or ethical concerns about piracy, or additional restrictions on their Internet, or who just lack the technical skill.

        It’s certainly fair to keep an eye on Anonym and Mozilla in this regard, but I haven’t seen anything objectionable there yet.

        Similar for the Mozilla AI. It seems it’s still in it’s infancy and I’m not a fan of companies jumping on the air bandwagon in general, but at the very least Mozilla has identified the problems with other AI’s and is looking to create a better alternative. If they get caught stealing training data, releasing tools to allow high schoolers to make deep fake revenge porn, tell people to start putting glue in their pizza cheese, or some other crap like that then they should absolutely be criticized for it. But none of that has happened yet that I’m aware of.

        I also can’t find exactly what you’re referring to with Russia. The closest thing is that it looks like there were some extensions that were made to work around Russian state censorship. The Russian government passed a law in March banning such workarounds. In response, Mozilla took down 5 extensions, reviewed them, and then decided to reinstate them in June. Not quite ideal, but still seems like reasonable action to me.

        It’s fair and a good thing to criticize Mozilla and Firefox. But it seems like you’re trying to spin every single move they make as a sign the sky is falling.

        And I also know that there are both states and corporations paying people to go on the Internet and push propaganda. Firrfox has a lot of enemies. You cant just blindly believe every article saying they are succumbing to enshittification.

    • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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      3 months ago

      Oh so tracking cookies should be the same, find the settings menu to opt out since the majority of the population just clicks to accept everything.

    • jqubed@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      This process has been underway since the project switched their focus from the Mozilla Suite to Firefox. Early Firefox was lightweight with limited features and the idea that you would add your own as extensions for the features you wanted. Then it started gaining traction and the Mozilla developers started forcing features in that should’ve been extensions. It’s been downhill ever since!

      • cley_faye@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Even better, they took actual extensions and made them built-in and impossible to remove. The work was already done to keep a lightweight browser with extra features in option, and they reverted it.

      • unexposedhazard@discuss.tchncs.de
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        3 months ago

        A few months ago people would have still downvoted your comment, but the message has made it to everyone now. Mozilla and with that Firefox is an endangered species that needs to be steered back into safety.

  • cley_faye@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    It’s been going for years now. We just don’t want to move away because, frankly, there’s little viable alternatives.

    • cm0002@lemmy.worldOP
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      3 months ago

      This is a 100% handmade meme by me lol

      I actually did consider putting IE, but then I realized IE never went through enshittification it was just always shit lmao so it didn’t fit

      • Cagi@lemmy.ca
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        3 months ago

        IE was had a near monopoly on browsing for a long time after Netscape Navigator enshittified (the true first door).

  • cqst@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    3 months ago

    There will be no improvement with browsers until the introduction of one with a strong copyleft license.

    • LarmyOfLone@lemm.ee
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      3 months ago

      I’m curious, how would copyleft license improve the quality of browser development? That is really about funding and management.

      • unemployedclaquer@sopuli.xyz
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        3 months ago

        Chromium is fully entrenched. “strong copyleft”? Even Microsoft bent to the will of Chromium. And Firefox is just a silly thing where people like me hang on

        • areyouevenreal@lemm.ee
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          3 months ago

          If I remember correctly it’s under a copy left license which makes sense given it’s ultimately a derivative of KHTML.

          • unemployedclaquer@sopuli.xyz
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            3 months ago

            KHTML is a discontinued browser engine that was developed by the KDE project. It originated as the engine of the Konqueror browser in the late 1990s, but active development ceased in 2016. It was officially discontinued in 2023. Built on the KParts framework and written in C++, KHTML had relatively good support for Web standards during its prime. Engines forked from KHTML are used by most of the browsers that are widely used today, including WebKit and Blink

            • areyouevenreal@lemm.ee
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              3 months ago

              Yes, blink is the engine Chromium uses. Since KHTML was an open source project any project based on it will have to be open source, unless of course it’s just used as a library. Even in that case though blink the engine is forced to be open source even if the browser as a whole isn’t. GNU licenses are considered infectious because anything containing any GNU code automatically and legally becomes open source. So KHTML being unmaintained is irrelevant.

    • el_abuelo@programming.dev
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      3 months ago

      Ok I’m probably just a simpleton who doesn’t get it…but is this comic really suggesting that HTML5 I’d a negative thing, and worse, is the drumbeat of a tyrannical web?

      I mean really…HTML5 is one of the best things to happen to the Web and the W3C is imo the essential glue holding things together.

      Browser inconsistencies are so few and far between now it makes building an inclusive Web much easier, you can almost do it by accident.

  • Mwa@lemm.ee
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    3 months ago

    zen browser (hardened) or forked librewolf that is designed to be fast is nice (my distro has this browser called cachy browser its based on librewolf with some compiler optimizations and its nice)

  • RangerJosie@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Noooooo.

    I like my Extensions.

    The internet isn’t worth having without Ublock, Ghostery, Scriptmonkey, etc.

  • eldavi@lemmy.ml
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    3 months ago

    i think that the first sign of enshitification is its leaders and it seems like it’s already here.

    i’m wondering what browser to switch to next.

  • Colonel Panic@lemm.ee
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    3 months ago

    I’ve left Firefox twice now and come back. It’s still far less shitty than the other main options.

  • JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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    3 months ago

    Well then I’ll make my own browser! With blackjack! And hookers!

    Oh. Wait…that’s just tor-browser.