Mozilla announced a change to Firefox this week and people overreacted. So I made a video about exactly why this change means nothing and why these emotions are misplaced. Sit back and relax my nea...
I agree that the majority of the backlash is overblown, and mostly the result of unclear messaging. However, it's important that Mozilla is held to a standard. They have presented themselves as a privacy-respecting alternative, and when they do things that sow distrust, it undermines their mission.
They're one of the few nonprofit organizations that can reasonably compete with the other major players in the browser space, and I hope they can continue to exist while keeping their integrity intact. It seems that task is proving extremely difficult in the current industry.
They literally said they had rights to everything you typed into Firefox, and then said for "necessary" purposes. Then in the same stroke of the pen removed all references to "Never selling your data". Nope, it's black and white for me. This video can try and convince me that "I don't understand legalese", but I read it right there.
Legalese is just very precise wording. When they use something as vague as "necessary" without defining what necessary means - it means it has no definition. Necessary to who? For them to operate Firefox but will never leave my PC? Then that would have been something they could have written into the actual agreement. Does it mean Necessary for Mozilla to maintain their market position by selling data? Again, we have no idea because it wasn't written down. No, the vagueness was there on purpose. They know what data I'm typing into my browser and how much it's worth.
And I haven't even mentioned how they tried to tell me how I could not use my browser on my computer to look at "explicit imagery".
No, fuck Mozilla, they were very clear in what they said.
Personally I switched to LibreWolf and it's a drop in replacement. I don't know if it'll be my forever decision, but I've been using it for 4 straight days and don't even notice it.
Don't bother commenting if you're not even going to watch more than 10% of the video. You're right that he has some bias, but he is aware of Mozilla's flaws and presents some good points.