I am shocked. Shocked! /s

  • Mina@berlin.social
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    @dantheclamman

    I am definitely starting to hate #Mozilla.

    As a remark: I have always been fine with their deal with Pocket and having Google as their default search engine. In the end, there are bills to be paid.

    Until I learned that e.g. Mozilla Corporation’s CEO is on a multi-million dollar salary, and they’re hiring ai and ad people.

    Not OK for an entity where many highly skilled people code for free.

    It’s not what users want the cash to be spent on.

    Leaving the Fedi is the final drop

    • dantheclamman@lemmy.worldOP
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      I was cool with them buying Pocket. But as a long time user of Pocket, I feel it has horribly stagnated. Far more features have been lost than have been gained.

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        And JFC the monthly subscription price for Pocket is steep for what it offers.

      • Kushan@lemmy.world
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        Stagnation is Mozilla’s MO. Fuck, go look at Thunderbird and be transported back to the 90’s.

        Even Microsoft is updating outlook - fucking outlook is innovating, Outlook being the cancer on email that’s held it back for decades, is being updated.

    • Vincent@feddit.nl
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      I think you might be overestimating how much code is contributed by unpaid volunteers…

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            @morrowind

            Exactly! Mozilla wants people to know, they don’t give a shit.

            A few years of party for executives are still possible, and just before Firefox and Thunderbird go into oblivion, quickly into a new management position at an ai company (or whatever may be the hype, then).

            Mark my words!

      • Bitrot@lemmy.sdf.org
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        2 months ago

        It seems like the kind of thing the Foundation would run anyway (or sponsor as a separate project), rather than the Corporation being involved at all.

    • CrypticCoffee@lemm.ee
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      Why does it matter that they don’t run an instance? Most open source projects do not.

      As long as they keep an account on an instance and keep it up to date, this is the main thing.

      Hate is a strong emotional decision for a company making an internet browser…

        • CrypticCoffee@lemm.ee
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          No. It’s trying something. If company’s get punished for investing and trying something, others won’t even try in future. I respect they tried. If I was in charge, I wouldn’t have bothered.

          • Mina@berlin.social
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            @CrypticCoffee

            I wonder, how increasing CEO pay year by year worked out for them.

            Certainly, definitely not in growing the user base, but also not in revenue that would make up it.

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              Separate issue entirely. I’m talking specifically about Fediverse investment and why that was the final straw.

              I thought the discussion was about that and not a “I hate Mozilla” greatest hits.

              You can always throw in that Google fund them and a 10 year old bug that hasn’t been resolved if that was your purpose.

              I guess ranting can help you feel better, so I hope it helped.

                • CrypticCoffee@lemm.ee
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                  I read it, just had nothing to add.

                  For the record, I disagree with the AI funding, CEO pay and pocket stuff. It doesn’t make me hate them though. They build the biggest open source alternative to Google dictating standards for web. That’s massive. I strongly dislike google for a multitude of reasons and hating a company that challenges that is a strange position to take. If Firefox goes, we’re mega fucked.

                  Maybe place your anger with the actual bad actors in the browser space.

    • 7dev7random7@suppo.fi
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      I am definitely starting to hate #Mozilla.

      As a remark: I have always been fine with their deal with Pocket and having Google as their default search engine. In the end, there are bills to be paid.

      Until I learned that e.g. Mozilla Corporation’s CEO is on a multi-million dollar salary, and they’re hiring ai and ad people.

      Without having a say from him you are implying malicious intentions about the CEO. Which has given his actual, real Name to be in this position and so the anonym majority can provide their take. He put hisnentire career on it. Now wr could argue, that he still gets a decent job afterwards. But these are presumptions and not necessarly a representive Representation of his intentions at sign. I did non research if he has an history of climbing the latter by switching positions. Also job changes have to be interpreted to form an subjectivr opinion (We still wouldn’t have heard his side which would neex to be verified).

      Not OK for an entity where many highly skilled people code for free.

      I once read in their blogs that the contribution percentage is very low. Which take part in the decision of inventing Rust.

      It’s not what users want the cash to be spent on.

      Leaving the fediverse is saving money. Having such an input isn’t providing any benefit to them. This is why I raise my comment.

      Leaving the Fedi is the final drop

      I also did erase my lemmy account. I have two left. But discussions to my liking are more objective and explorative until you truely can pinpoint the intentions of the dialogue partner.

      So fuck this headline, I agree with them and you are shortsighted and doing unnecessary negative advertisement for them No benefit of the doubt.

      You are actually playing with the existence if the last good player with impact.

  • kbal@fedia.io
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    Mozilla 2012: We’re winning the browser war and saving the web. You’re welcome.

    Mozilla 2017: Competing with Chrome is hard. What if we break all existing extensions and never let people replace them all?

    Mozilla 2021: Through inclusiveness and the power of positive thinking we will facilitate leadership towards in-depth studies of what we can do to improve social media.

    Mozilla 2024: Running a small mastodon instance is just too hard, we give up.

    • LWD@lemm.ee
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      Just a little comment on 2021: It seems disingenuous, from their perspective. Steve Teixeira, In a lawsuit, is claiming that not only did Mozilla try to get him to fire employees who were disproportionately minorities, but they were within a group that was producing a profit for Mozilla.

      In other words, Mozilla might have been preaching inclusivity publicly while practicing exclusivity privately.

    • Nytefyre@kbin.melroy.org
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      Mozilla in early 2000s: We’re glad we’ve broken you away from Internet Explorer’s chains. You’re welcome.

    • namingthingsiseasy@programming.dev
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      Mozilla 2017: Competing with Chrome is hard. What if we break all existing extensions and never let people replace them all?

      This is the one that broke my back. Understandable that XPCOM extensions had to go, but leaving nothing to replace them, and then going on to push their trash UI redesigns without giving us any recourse to change them back - that was just unforgivable.

      Then again, that was still well before they started pushing spyware in their own browser, so in retrospect, those were very quaint times!

    • Eiri@lemmy.ca
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      I understand that they need to diversify so that they’re not so dependent on Google’s default search engine money. I don’t know how they should do that.

      But I’m not sure what they’ve been doing has been all that good of an idea.

      • Pup Biru@aussie.zone
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        make their browser engine useable for 3rd parties and sell support, make an electron-like product and add premium features… there are so many browser-based products that people sell, and owning 1 of the only viable browser engines should be huge… the fact that firefox is still only barely able to be embedded is a travesty

        it’d be especially valuable if they made a premium electron product that provided security/privacy guarantees, performance benefits, etc - they should siphon some of the profit off the number of for-profit companies that build electron apps

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          I kinda like the idea but I also kinda hate it.

          I really wish PWAs worked properly cross-platform instead. :(

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            SSB was killed after it sat behind an about:config flag, then their telemetry (that most power users disable) reported folks weren’t using. But what average users would be using a setting they would need to poke around to find. It’s a real shame too since I want to say it was PeppermintOS that was largely built around PWAs.

          • Pup Biru@aussie.zone
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            totally agree, but also you can do more with an electron-like app - elevated privileges, less sandbox, etc because the user expects such things from an installed “native” app

      • slacktoid@lemmy.ml
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        well paying execs multimillion dollar salaries aint helping thats for sure!

        Also. What’s the point of their mastodon server? It’s cool but so what

      • TheFrirish@jlai.lu
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        They’re 80% dependent on google there is no choice. Mozilla’s behaviour since they got the google deal was the begining of the end. I honestly believe that due to Mozilla’s current leadership it would be best for open source developers to all refocus on the ladybird project. I don’t have any affiliation to that project and I understand how huge of an undertaking it is to build a web engine from scratch but the gecko engine is polluted by the Mozilla’s execs and by extension Google.

        To make it clear Google controls Firefox by, in practice, owning an 80% share of Mozilla.

    • pyre@lemmy.world
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      with how many singular developers managed to do it based on Firefox when Mozilla couldn’t pull their shit together, idk why anyone would still be holding their breath. just switch to a competent fork.

        • pyre@lemmy.world
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          that’s what’s i said, but they’re all better functioning than firefox

            • pyre@lemmy.world
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              but there is a base, and it isn’t good. the forks are. you said you want a good browser. they’re not making it. the forks are good. idk what you’re arguing about.

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                Most forks take an ESR version and build on top of that. Who is gonna make that ESR base?

                You’re saying the equivalent of ‘I don’t care about the Linux kernel cause Ubuntu is better and everyone should use that’ of arguments.

                Not saying you are literally saying ^

                • pyre@lemmy.world
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                  have I said anywhere that Firefox should cease to exist or Mozilla shouldn’t do security patches or whatever because i thought we were talking about having a good browser experience.

    • Nytefyre@kbin.melroy.org
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      They don’t know how to do that and never did.

      It’s always been “Uhhh let’s have people make Firefox accounts, yeah!” When, in this day and age, the last thing people need is yet another account to keep track of.

      “Lets get into AI, yeah!” Said no one ever.

      Like, is it too much to fucking ask for a simple, privacy-centric, security (not overreaching), performance priority browser?

      I mean look around how many forks of Firefox that there are out there, having to do the legwork because Firefox isn’t that much of the shit it thinks it is.

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        I’ve never understood the argument. It seems to have kind of been collectively hallucinated into existence by waves of internet comment sections over the years. But these aren’t mutually exclusive, and nobody has made a case that the resources for these other features are compromising the ability to deliver core browser functionality.

        They also seem to assume that it’s development decisions, rather than Google leveraging its search dominance and financial muscle, that are tied to changes in market share. I actually think these value-adds can be good, can punch above their weight and can, if they are smart in picking their spots, do so without necessarily compromising their ability to advance the development of Firefox.

        And nobody ever stops, breathes in and out, collects the evidence and makes the actual case. It’s just kind of assumed, asserted, repeated, assumed again, repeated again ad nauseum. Because enough people have seen other people say it, so they say it too knowing it leads to upvotes.

        The ones closest to citing evidence, thankfully understanding at least how a real argument would actually work, are also the most unhinged, which probably isn’t a coincidence.

        • Nytefyre@kbin.melroy.org
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          Why would I take the time and energy out of my day to jump through hoops to prove my case. At the very likely chance that someone like you will refute it anyways and waive it off like you did with my comment?

          Not worth it.

      • slacktoid@lemmy.ml
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        Will it run locally and use GPU offloading to summarize articles while citing them. Sure why not.

    • Mwa@lemm.ee
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      Same,i wish they can make their browser fast and actually private since gecko is slower then chromium (and maybe webkit?) its even worse on windows

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    Does it matter that they don’t run an instance?

    As long as they have accounts and keep them up to date, that is the main thing.

    How many open source projects actually run and moderate instances?

    • LWD@lemm.ee
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      The effectiveness of the internet as a public resource depends upon interoperability (protocols, data formats, content), innovation and decentralized participation worldwide.

      - Mozilla Manifesto, Principle 6, emphasis mine

      • CrypticCoffee@lemm.ee
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        So how does not running a virtual soapbox that is niche and most do not care about affect the public’s ability to participate in the internet from where they are?

        I’m not sure if you didn’t understand the point or are cherry picking words to satiate your feelings?

        • LWD@lemm.ee
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          Because if Mozilla can’t practice what it preaches, while it spews $65 million of venture capital at AI companies, something is wrong.

          And I’m not cherry picking words, I’m responding to your question with their answer: centralization and non-interoperability are problems, and decentralization with interoperable protocols is the answer they propose.

          Btw, I scanned through some of your posts and noticed you aren’t a fan of AI either. While running this little social network and GenAI do not have to be mutually exclusive, Steve Teixeira was fired because he refused to “innovate” in GenAI and, if I recall correctly, Mozilla.social was one of his projects.

          You might not care about the lives of birds, but if a canary in the coal mine dies…

          Something is wrong.

          • CrypticCoffee@lemm.ee
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            They do not propose them for the internet, simply opting out of hosting Mastodon. A glorified look at me RSS feed with built in validation (likes). They’re not even suggesting they’ll move away from posting on it. You probably guessed I never really liked xitter so the alternative is quite meaningless to me. I just want a browser not run by Google.

            I do not believe in GenAI and do believe it’ll fail. I do not believe I’m guaranteed to be right. Folk seem to like confidently incorrect answers and are hooked on them. Mozilla need to diversify their revenue streams and maybe they get it right. If users expect that integration, and rivals do it, then they will perceive it as rubbish and not use it or move to it, which could be a failure.

            I do not know this Steve chap, but I do know devs are asked to work on stuff and if they refuse, they’re not doing their job. In that case, you do it, or leave. He got fired and ultimately if he wasn’t running it, they even find someone else (was there anyone willing?) or can it. It got canned. No dev really chooses their workload, just how they go about it.

            It’s less suspicious than you want it to be.

            • LWD@lemm.ee
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              It’s wild to see a Mozilla defender throw away their own beliefs and principles in order to defend a corporation wasting $65 million.

              I do not buy “Mozilla must diversify” which slips in the assumption that they are diversifying into the right thing, the “right thing” in this case being AI and other random crap, including a direct competitor to their own Relay service. If you believe this, you need to deal with the cognitive dissonance that comes from this, and explain the basis for why you believe in them while simultaneously believing in the opposite of them.

              And if you don’t know about the Steve Teixeira lawsuit, and you are still being authentic, you’ll have an even harder time reckoning with that. I don’t know how you drilled this deep into a conversation without stumbling across it, but my hope in your honesty springs eternal.

              • CrypticCoffee@lemm.ee
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                You must be one of the few that do not believe they should diversify. Most Mozilla haters criticise the fact they are dependent on Google money and therefore not independent. I did not say it was the right thing. I said I do not believe it is, but iI could be wrong. Not sure if you aware about humility.

                It is not cognitive dissidence to believe positive and negative things about a company or thing. It’s call a balanced decision. It requires nuance, a key component in adult decision making. Usually children struggle with that as something is all great or all bad. Black and white thinking isn’t really fit for the adult world.

                You are surprised that you are supposed to back up your opinions and bring references to a discussion. This is the first time I have heard of this Steve guy. If you think it’s common knowledge, you’ve probably been stuck too deep in the Mozilla haters echo chamber.

                • LWD@lemm.ee
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                  You must be one of the few that do not believe they should diversify

                  This is an incorrect read of what I said. I said I don’t buy the assumption that Mozilla is diversifying into anything good:

                  If you believe this, you need to deal with the cognitive dissonance that comes from this, and explain the basis for why you believe in them while simultaneously believing in the opposite of them.

                  Unlike you, I provided explicit examples of bad diversification, where are your examples of the good?

                  You are surprised that you are supposed to back up your opinions and bring references to a discussion.

  • Corgana@startrek.website
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    This sucks (Was it really costing much money to run?) but as long as Firefox continues to work with full-flavor ublock I’m happy.

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    Weird that they called it a “Beta”, like running a chat server you didn’t code is somehow an experiment. Just say you couldn’t be arsed running it anymore.

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    I don’t get why, I can’t see this be difficult or costly to run, but then again I have no clue, never ran a Mastodon instance.

    I would assume that it’s not worth the small reach compared to running X / Bluesky / Threads accounts but then again, like I said, the cost must be super small. 🤷

    • LWD@lemm.ee
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      If Mozilla doesn’t discontinue a Mastodon server with under 300 people, how will it continue funding the $65 million AI and venture capital investments they’ve been making?! 😬

  • zante@lemmy.wtf
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    I guess hating Mozilla is very much in fashion. The tech chatterati have made it so.

    They’ll move on, as they always do. I just hope Firefox is still here.

    • dantheclamman@lemmy.worldOP
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      Critiquing Mozilla when they make mistakes is not the same as hating them. It is healthy to keep these organizations accountable

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      The issue is all signs point to them pivoting to AI and ad driven nonsense - they’ll move on, but if the product goes to shit so will I. The rest is noise.

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    How defeatist of you, Mozilla. Whatever happened to your pride? Oh, it went a long time ago when you make a big deal about going 3.0 and how you claimed to have improved Firefox’s performance. Been a long time, but Firefox remains ever more the same as it did way back then, just cluttered with more features that weighs it’s performance.

    • dantheclamman@lemmy.worldOP
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      I adore Firefox. Just tired of Mozilla trying features (FF Panorama) and hobbies (Notes) and then abandoning them

    • LWD@lemm.ee
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      Like all products, Firefox still maintains a small core of uncritical, devoted fans. To them, Mozilla can do no wrong.

      The problem is, up until a few months ago, Mozilla advocated for privacy and other public facing values that lined up with their manifesto. Now, they are breaking away from that, and the true believers are shifting too: becoming hostile to privacy.

      The people who liked Firefox because of its privacy stance, or because they were looking for an alternative to Big Tech, on the other hand, aren’t 100% likely to become a true believer, and those people are the critics. Often, those critics have been around for years going on decades.

      • abbenm@lemmy.ml
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        I see this as revisionist history. Mozilla has long been beloved for a whole host of FOSS reasons, that align with the same reasons FOSS enthusiasts like anything FOSS. I do think there are fanbases for things who think their object of adoration can do no wrong (e.g. Sneako fans probably). They are out there, but I don’t see that as being true of Mozilla.

        I’ve seen supporters of Mozilla make nuanced points about it being an imperfect but important diversification of options that prevents Google from dominating the browser space, often in thoughtful interactions with fans of (say) the Brave browser or Opera browser over the fact that they rely on Chromium which is sustained by Google.

        Those convos have more going on than uncritical adoration, and imo it’s important to let those nuances breath so that they, rather the oversimplifications, can be our primary takeaways.

        Interestingly, while talking in mournful past tense about Firefox’s having lost their way, in this same thread there are people a few comments above denying that criticism of Mozilla is prevalent here. You guys should scroll up (or down) and say hello to each other.

    • Mango@lemmy.world
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      We aren’t fickle. We adhere very strongly to our principles but it’s easier to direct people to a name when they aren’t interested in understanding why.

        • Vincent@feddit.nl
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          I think “the Fediverse” is generally understood to refer to ActivityPub-based projects, or even more narrowly, “things that can be seen from Mastodon”. At least I understood it as such, even if that’s not technically correct.

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              As of August 2024, diaspora* is the only actively developed project classified under the tradition fediverse term that doesn’t support ActivityPub.

    • toastal@lemmy.ml
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      I would be mad if this would be next to fall since I use it. I don’t self-host Matrix since it is too expensive being built on a fundamental ‘eventual consistency’ model mirroring all text & attachments for all users in every DM & room to your storage—not to mention the Python implementation server & even the Rust one use much more system resources than other open chat options. It’s the same for Mastodon specifically too which but Ruby this time—with eventual consistency chewing up GiBs of storage making small players shut down instances. I would not be surprised tho if their Matrix server fell next just based on hosting cost.

      Wanting to get folks off proprietary garbage like Slack, Telegram, & Discord was the right idea but moving to Matrix will prove to be a mistake as nodes are too expensive to run therefore leads to the centralization we need to escape. With the poor performance of the flagship Element client too, casual users think it is too damn slow (literally takes 2 minutes to even get to a screen with text in my browser & it isn’t even done syncing). There are more mature technologies with lower running costs that could have/should have/can be embraced.