Asking after the privacy debacle and manifest. I’m not keeping up closely, but iirc Firefox is the browser recommended because of Ublock. After the privacy data issue I’ve noticed broken trust from Firefox users, recommendations in favor of switching browsers, and predictions saying Firefox is going downhill fast and that their forks won’t be maintained for much longer.

So I’m here asking the seasoned sailors’ thoughts, aye. Is this just a storm passing by or are you really considering jumping ship?

  • @[email protected]
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    1 month ago

    It’s mostly overblown. You can watch here or read here. The internet is overreacting again, but Mozilla has done fuck all to grasp why just yoinking understandable language and expecting people to understand legalese and draw lines to their Privacy Policy is making people upset or confused.

    Imo, people jumping ship is justified, because a company that makes $37M just on investments should do better about being vocal and prescient champions of privacy. Even if their actual privacy policy is the same as it was a year ago, their failure to communicate with their supporters in a way they can understand should have consequences.

    • @[email protected]
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      871 month ago

      It may be overblown but I am seriously tired of the way Mozilla is being run. The CEO has a $7 million salary. Big red flags always appear each time they increase the salary also. May be a bit hyperbolic but that’s why I’m just using another fork after 20 years

      • @[email protected]
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        241 month ago

        Yup. I’ve been using Firefox for 16 years and I just switched to LibreWolf the other day.

        • @[email protected]M
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          31 month ago

          I’ve been using Netscape/Firefox for almost 20+ years. Donated a good chunk of money.

          I went to Waterfox

      • @[email protected]
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        201 month ago

        Yeah, and while I don’t have any technical qualms about the direction of Mozilla with regard to Firefox, I’m personally switching for peace of mind and because of the aforementioned inability to communicate well. I don’t like working with or supporting people that can’t just say what they mean. I mean, how hard would it have been to have a human-readable version for stupid people like me and have a legalese version for the lawyers?

        Regardless, as people make decisions, they deserve to be informed. It would be stupid to decide to leave Firefox if all you knew was the uninformed outrage of the internet.

        • @[email protected]
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          111 month ago

          That’s fair. Personally I should have called it quits when they started including pocket in the browser, but better late than never.

      • @[email protected]
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        41 month ago

        They’re red flag, but even if their stayed purpose is correct at the moment, it sets the stage. All it takes now is a want to sell the data and there’s nothing to slow them down or tell us. Nothing to make them keep the setting to not share telemetry. A little baked in ai, some hooks to monitor …

        Jumping ship to a fork is our only recourse. It’s that or ride it out and see if the gun is loaded.

    • Coldmoon
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      71 month ago

      That’s my take too - it’s probably not a big deal but damn Mozilla, do better in the rollout of a change like that.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 month ago

    Yea sticking with firefox , but with arkenfox hardening… bugfixes are more important than fear of some wordings , at least for now. Vanadium in GOS on the phone.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 month ago

    The browser project dedicated to open web standards steered by a compromised non-profit or the browser project dedicated to undermining the traditional web browsing experience steered by the largest advertising company on Earth … Let me think …

    • Venia Silente
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      161 month ago

      It’s incredible unfunny to read people here on Lemmy (or in the Fediverse in general) talk about dropping Firefox for Chrome or a Chromium browser. it’s like complaining that your country is going wrong by voting Trump.

  • katy ✨
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    321 month ago

    i wasn’t as plussed as everyone else over it, though i am concerned. i still donate to mozilla as, ultimately, i believe they’re still good for those who champion an ethical, open, and not for profit internet.

    i have switched to librefox, though, just because i like their developers and the fact that they’ve embraced mastodon and the fediverse. i also have firefox and nightly (though i use fennec on android because it comes through f droid)

    • @[email protected]
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      11 month ago

      Is Fennec trustable? They had that one vulnerability incident I can’t name and that’s when I first heard about them.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 month ago

        The “vulnerability” was only that F-Droid wasn’t keeping up with their builds, leaving everyone who installed it from F-Droid out-of-date, during a period of known Firefox bugs being exploited.

      • katy ✨
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        31 month ago

        it’s basically just the latest firefox without the proprietary stuff, google services, and telemetry. i’ve never had an issue :)

  • @[email protected]
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    201 month ago

    I still recommend it. I’m not fully happy with the situation but for now I consider it my best option.

    1. I consider Chromium-based browsers out of the question as they give too much power to Google. This is already showing to be a problem with new APIs and “features” that Google is pushing into the web platform and the bigger the market share gets the more control they have.
    2. Web browsers are the biggest attack surface that most people have. Displaying untrusted webpages and running untrusted code is incredibly difficult and vulnerabilities are regularly discovered. I don’t yet know a Firefox fork that I trust enough to reliably respond to security vulnerabilities quickly and correctly.

    So for now I am staying with raw Firefox. Not to mention that as a disto-built Firefox I have some insulation from Mozilla’s ToS. But I am very much considering some of the forks, especially the ones that are very light with patches and are mostly configuration tweaks.

  • @[email protected]
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    241 month ago

    Firefox with like 10 different settings checkboxes unticked through its settings to disable phoning home, prevent sponsored suggestions, prevent recommendations, etc. + ublock origin extension installed, obviously.

    It used to be just an install and go ordeal. Now you have to have all these caveats. I used to send technical and interaction to Mozilla but given their terms changes I can’t be confident in them with even that much information anymore.

    Final thought is I don’t see what Mozilla’s endgame is. It costs a lot of money to develop a competitive and impactful web browser, I understand that much. Where are they supposed to get their money from? Well. I don’t get paid millions a year to solve this problem, but it seems pretty obvious the current leadership have made their minds up to make Firefox yet another advertisement browser.

    • venotic
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      111 month ago

      All that we’ve ever asked from Mozilla is three things:

      • Focus on the performance of your browser so that it is not a hog.

      • Upkeep privacy

      • Keep it secure

      Out of all of those things, Mozilla fails at all except maybe the last thing. We didn’t ask for AI implementation. We didn’t ask for Firefox accounts. We didn’t ask for whatever feature flavor of the month that Mozilla got a hair up their ass about that they just had to throw into the browser. We asked for simple things and Mozilla overshot them. How are any of these features meant to uphold the values once held by Mozilla?

      If you want to talk about a nothing-burger, think of all of the reasons that Mozilla had danced around to excuse itself by throwing these things in. And the cherry on top was the Terms of Service. Truly, they are tone-deaf.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 month ago

      To be fair nobody asked Mozilla to serve a stupid and detached statement without contextualizing what they meant or try to achieve.

      [Edit] it feels like they’re asking for the outrage. You can’t just drop assurances of not selling data without explaining if your crowd is privacy aware. You can’t take broad licenses from your users if you don’t explain for what they are for. Having plaintext comment next to the lawyer speak would have fixed all that and none of this had to be this shitty. [/Edit]

        • @[email protected]
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          41 month ago

          It also includes a nonexclusive, royalty-free, worldwide license for the purpose of doing as you request with the content you input in Firefox. This does not give Mozilla any ownership in that content.

          It’s still in the current version of the TOS without a direct explanation which can be found anywhere close to it. This is plain bad from a communication stand point.

    • @[email protected]
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      271 month ago

      That asterisk is a problem though, having to go through and make it secure is an issue. What if you miss a setting? What if you misunderstand a setting? None of it is particularly upfront and easy. It doesn’t ask you when you first install it to set this stuff up, it encourages you to just get stuck in and start using it straight away.

      It’s not too complicated for a nerd whose hobby is computers or someone who has studied computers, but for the layperson it’s too much.

      That’s why Librewolf is so good. It’s secure by default, with all the settings toggled to privacy and you can ease that off if you wish, for convenience or whatever.

      Firefox essentially can’t seem to decide if they want to be FOSS or capitalist, that’s an issue.

      • @[email protected]
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        91 month ago

        And based on the behavior of other shitty applications and devices what if an update silently changes one of those settings back to a problematic state? If they aren’t there to begin with I don’t have to worry as much

        To be fair Mozilla doesn’t have precedent for this behavior but they also didn’t have precedent for this whole nonsense that started this drama a month ago. Things change

      • Coldmoon
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        191 month ago

        The other fun part is when it updates and changes your privacy settings.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 month ago

        It’s not too complicated for a nerd whose hobby is computers or someone who has studied computers, but for the layperson it’s too much.

        I’m not sure I buy this argument when there are videos visually walking you through every single step involved in hardening Firefox. Is that still too complex for your elderly parents or grandparents? Maybe. Is it too complex for Millenials and younger generations? Definitely not. The core problem here is just laziness. People are not willing to give up 10 minutes of their day to setup their browser for years of future use because “I don’t have time for that”.

        • @[email protected]
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          61 month ago

          The problem is not laziness, that’s what a nerd whose hobby is computers would do. The average person is not searching for videos to learn how to toggle the settings of their web browser, ffs. Firefox should be secure by default.

          • @[email protected]
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            41 month ago

            In that case your entire argument for LibreWolf is a complete waste of time, because this theoretical user you’re referring to also wouldn’t bother to download an unknown niche privacy browser. LibreWolf is essentially just hardened Firefox for people who are too lazy to do it themselves. The crossover between completely tech illiterate but also privacy-focused is an insanely small market.

            • @[email protected]
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              41 month ago

              Ah, I see, you’re a contrarian who just wants an argument. That’s not really my bag so this will be my last message.

              Yes, the likelihood of the average person downloading Librewolf is slim. Using or not using Librewolf doesn’t make someone lazy. Not reading and toggling every setting in Firefox doesn’t make someone lazy either.

              You’ve just explained that to make Firefox secure you need to watch some video of someone that you hope knows what they’re talking about. What if they miss something? What if they’re talking shit? I know, shocking, people lying on the internet, but it happens.

              Firefox is a big name browser used by many people of varying backgrounds and technical ability. It should be secure by default. It is not. Librewolf I recommended to anyone reading this thread, which is probably someone tech savvy enough to try a different browser. But not all people are that tech savvy.

              The root issue is Firefox not being secure by default. If there was no profit motive for Mozilla it likely would be.

              • @[email protected]
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                21 month ago

                You’ve just explained that to make Firefox secure you need to watch some video of someone that you hope knows what they’re talking about.

                No actually, I didn’t. I suggested that anyone who is not confident/literate enough to work this out for themselves through self-research online can access extremely beginner-friendly guides on YouTube that step-by-step walk them through the setup. Everyone knows how to use YouTube, please don’t insult my intelligence by implying it’s some kind of semi-mythical resource known only to the the biggest “nerds”.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 month ago

        You’re talking about security, but really, none of the privacy questions are about technical security of the product.

        “What if you miss a setting?” Then they’ll give you article recommendations or send your search query to the search engine you’re targeting in the first place. They’re really a long way from what you can call a security issue, or sharing personal data with random third parties or data brokers.

        if they want to be FOSS or capitalist

        I really don’t see any basis for this take. It’s not about picking one of two extremes, and the most extreme niches in those.

        They create FOSS, and look for privacy respecting partnerships and investment so they can keep it going.


        They added ToS because they’re integrating services, like their synced/backed up browser data and other respectful integration.

        That’s all a long way from malice, or significant problematic behavior. And you still have more choice than on the other biggest alternatives.

        I don’t think it is the best we could have, I would like it a bit different too, but the way you make it out to be is way overblown if not wrong.

  • simpolomeo
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    371 month ago

    The whole firefox controversy was overblown. Hardened firefox is still the way to go.

  • Yozul
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    301 month ago

    I’m not interested in anything based off Chromium, and I don’t really like the idea of going with a Firefox fork much either. You’re not only trusting them to actually care about your privacy and security, and you’re not even just trusting them to actually catch and fix all of Mozilla’s shenanigans as well. You are also trusting them to constantly stay on top of all the latest security patches. There aren’t really any Firefox forks I trust with all 3 of those things at once. Even if there was, there are certainly no forks of Firefox that have anything even remotely close to the capacity necessary to maintain a web engine on their own, so you’re still trusting Mozilla to keep Firefox updated and secure for your fork of choice to even have a chance.

    Until a new browser with a new engine comes along that actually lets me use the full uBlock Origin there’s not really any other option besides Firefox that makes sense. At least to me.

  • DARbarian
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    241 month ago

    Nope. LibreWolf & Waterfox are top-tier, Zen and Mullvad Browsers aren’t bad at all

    • @[email protected]
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      71 month ago

      I will say as nice as Zen seems (I agree that it’s not bad), I don’t really like the whole “vertical tabs” shtick. I mean, I can see why some people would like that, but personally I never got into it. It just looks weird to me and I like seeing more of my tab names (weirdly enough that’s exactly what a lot of pro-vertical users claim is good about them lol).

      Also, from a privacy standpoint, not a huge fan personally of the fact that unlike LibreWolf, Zen Browser doesn’t have ResistFingerprinting enabled by default (not sure if it’s even in there tbh).

      • @[email protected]
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        51 month ago

        i agree with wanting see more of tab title. for people who regularly keep 50+ tabs open, that is a pipe dream.

        if tabs are so many that their iconized anyway, making the tab bar vertical and iconized isn’t much difference.

        and if the bar would expand on hover (hopefully in near future), like in Brave (not sure if it’s a Chrome feature), then it can be wide enough to see plenty of title without reducing the webpage size most of the time.

        • @[email protected]
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          21 month ago

          You know, I’ve been trying Zen and although I still prefer horizontal to vertical, I can see I was actually somewhat wrong about what I said.

          The sidebar is actually expandable (they don’t make that clear) and if you do expand it beyond its default, you can actually see more of each tab’s titles. It actually helps a lot if you have a shitload of tabs.

          If you are like me however and typically try to have only a smaller number of tabs pinned (or consistently open), typically no more than like a third of your screen width at most, then there really is not much of a difference unless you’re already used to vertical over horizontal tab bars.

          • @[email protected]
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            21 month ago

            I’ve been trying to keep less tabs open.

            it’s not easy while test-driving multiple search engines for every search lol

            • @[email protected]
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              1 month ago

              Oh I get it! It’s certainly not easy. Haha. I struggle with it myself, but I’ve noticed that my mental health improves the more uncluttered my external life is, and my browser is a part of the latter.

              “A tidy room is a tidy mind” and all that… It’s not 100% accurate, but it’s got a ring of truth to it, I’ve found, at least for me.

  • LiveLM
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    341 month ago

    I mean yeah. I’m not a fan of the changes but there’s no way in hell anything Chromium based will fare any better… do they even have uBlock still???

    Probably turn off the telemetry, try a fork like LibreWolf or maybe the Arkenfox user.js if you’d rather stay close to upstream.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 month ago

      I mean Chromium is an open source project, developers don’t have to do whatever Google demands.

      I know Brave still supports it alongside their own ad-blocker, but apparently the CEO is a dick so people don’t want to use it for that reason.