63 private links
Looks like Mozilla is doing everything it can to alienate the current Firefox user base and to push forward its forks.
Mozilla is clearly loosing its way, this is sad to watch. I guess the forks which remove the online advertising measures will become more popular.
It was to be expected that complaints against Mozilla could happen in Europe. They've been asking for it lately...
Since they unfortunately turned on private attribution by default (why? Mozilla, why?). Here is an easy automated way to turn it off.
Interesting guesses at what could change with the Google ruling. It doesn't look too good for Mozilla.
You'd expect Mozilla to know better. This is disappointing, they're no living up to their responsibility.
Those were nasty, good they've been patched already.
All good reasons to use Firefox! I'm always about the market share of engines where we need diversity, but more good points are brought up here. It's the only going the extra mile to respect your privacy while bringing innovative features too (tested the in browser translation recently and it's great).
Looks like a nice way to properly learn the web frontend basics.
Alright, it's 2024... Looking for a New Year Resolution? This is definitely the one you should contemplate! Maybe also prepare your switch to Plasma 6, but different story. 😉
Very nice collection of stories from the trenches of Firefox development. Lots of lessons learned to unpack about optimizing for the right thing, tooling, telemetry and so on.
Definitely the right move, more extensions are pouring in. People should benefit from them on Android as well.
Let's hope it won't get there... I wish people would abandon Chrome en masse. I unfortunately don't see it happening and it'll just weaken the Web.
This is indeed a nice improvement. I hope they keep working in this direction.
Clearly inspiring... this project really went from dying to skyrocketing. I'd like to see more of those.
Or why browser monoculture is bound to become more and more of an issue. Sad to see Mozilla's weak response to this move. Can't bite the hand that feeds I guess.
Despite the problems with Mozilla's politics and funding, this is the main reason why I use Firefox as my main browser (even on my smartphone). We can't have a monopoly on which organization influence the web standards... unfortunately we get fairly close from that position.