frontpage.
newsnewestaskshowjobs

Made with ♥ by @iamnishanth

Open Source @Github

fp.

Reinforcement Learning Infrastructure for LLM Agents

https://github.com/NVIDIA-NeMo/Gym
1•bakigul•56s ago•0 comments

Short-Circuiting Correlated Subqueries in SQLite

https://emschwartz.me/short-circuiting-correlated-subqueries-in-sqlite/
1•emschwartz•2m ago•0 comments

AI is creating more jobs so far

https://www.axios.com/2025/12/17/ai-jobs-market-wages
1•FergusArgyll•2m ago•0 comments

Strategies for getting feedback on your documentation

https://blog.techdocs.studio/p/strategies-for-improving-technical
1•dgarcia360•3m ago•0 comments

When you ship fast you might ship bugs in production, how I deal with that

https://www.bugmail.site
1•bumpymark•4m ago•2 comments

Show HN: HandsUp – Super Simple Volunteering

https://handsup.barryvan.com.au/
1•barryvan•6m ago•0 comments

Bayesian Data Analysis for Babies (By Claude Opus and Nano Banana)

https://github.com/juhoojala/baeysian-data-analysis-for-babies
1•ojalajuho•7m ago•1 comments

Nobel Prize–winning chemist dreams of making water from thin air

https://www.technologyreview.com/2025/12/17/1129259/omar-yaghi-chemist-nobel-prize-crystals-water...
1•fleahunter•8m ago•0 comments

Kubernetes v1.35

https://scaleops.com/blog/kubernetes-1-35-release-overview/
1•lauluzzzzz•9m ago•0 comments

to-clipboard-for-ai.sh

https://github.com/danielfalbo/distributed-systems/commit/685923e1c06c487d2591770fd8ef629668811f33
1•danielfalbo•10m ago•0 comments

From Ts_rank to BM25. Introducing Pg_textsearch: True BM25 Ranking and Retrieval

https://www.tigerdata.com/blog/introducing-pg_textsearch-true-bm25-ranking-hybrid-retrieval-postgres
1•ashvardanian•11m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Free MVP Cost Calculator (no signup required)

https://www.mvpdevelopmentcost.com/
1•megaseo•12m ago•0 comments

Luxembourg's digital ID monopoly down for 24h+, paralyzing national services

https://today.rtl.lu/news/luxembourg/no-transactions-or-authentications-currently-possible-via-lu...
3•svnee•12m ago•1 comments

Korea Zinc to build rare earths processing facility in Tennessee

https://www.tomshardware.com/tech-industry/trump-secures-deal-with-korea-zinc-to-build-rare-earth...
2•airhangerf15•13m ago•0 comments

Prompt caching: 10x cheaper LLM tokens

https://ngrok.com/blog/prompt-caching/
1•nkko•14m ago•0 comments

Android: The Google app is intentionally replacing Pixel Launcher search

https://9to5google.com/2025/12/16/pixel-launcher-search-google-app/
1•birdboat00•24m ago•0 comments

I launched a €9.9k/mo executive retreat using a free WordPress stack

1•QMLegacy•28m ago•0 comments

Authentication Model in OpenTelemetry

https://signoz.io/blog/auth-model-opentelemetry/
1•ankit01-oss•29m ago•0 comments

Fluxer is Dwitter for shaders – procedural art in 512 characters or less

https://fluxer.kodar.ninja
2•rezolver•34m ago•0 comments

Spooked by AI and Layoffs, White-Collar Workers See Their Security Slip Away

https://www.wsj.com/economy/jobs/white-collar-workers-job-anxiety-d8f83885
2•thm•38m ago•0 comments

I Put Claude in a Game Theory Tournament

https://matthodges.com/posts/2025-12-14-claude-axelrod-prisoners-dilemma/
2•m-hodges•39m ago•1 comments

Authentication – when logging in becomes the lock out

https://seemeplease.com/blog/authentication-when-logging-in-becomes-the-lockout
3•SeeMePlease•43m ago•2 comments

November in Servo: Monthly Releases, Context Menus, Parallel CSS Parsing, & More

https://servo.org/blog/2025/12/15/november-in-servo/
1•birdculture•43m ago•0 comments

Vm.overcommit_memory=2 is always the right setting for servers

https://ariadne.space/2025/12/16/vmovercommitmemory-is-always-the-right.html
3•signa11•43m ago•1 comments

Google's Official MCP Servers

https://github.com/google/mcp
1•bakigul•44m ago•0 comments

Jeffrey Epstein-linked accounts transferred funds to Noam Chomsky

https://www.timesofisrael.com/epstein-linked-accounts-transferred-funds-to-noam-chomsky-bard-coll...
1•nephihaha•44m ago•2 comments

Biologists discover neurons use physical signals to stabilize communication

https://dornsife.usc.edu/news/stories/synapse-stability-governed-by-physical-signals-not-electrical/
1•robtherobber•46m ago•0 comments

What are the pro and cons to immutable distro?

https://old.reddit.com/r/Fedora/comments/1pnqjyw/what_are_the_pro_and_cons_to_immutable_distro/
1•sipofwater•46m ago•0 comments

I managed a day and a half on Windows 11

https://old.reddit.com/r/Fedora/comments/1poapiq/i_managed_a_day_and_a_half_on_windows_11/
2•sipofwater•53m ago•1 comments

Belarusian Secret Service spied on cell phones

https://www.zeit.de/digital/2025-12/belarus-spionagesoftware-handy-app-opposition
8•doener•54m ago•3 comments
Open in hackernews

Is Mozilla trying hard to kill itself?

https://infosec.press/brunomiguel/is-mozilla-trying-hard-to-kill-itself
244•pabs3•1h ago

Comments

pomian•1h ago
Obviously, we die hard fans and users agree.
Croftengea•1h ago
You don't have to be very bright to figure killing adblockers in FF is a suicide.
phito•1h ago
150M seems like such a small number for something that would have so much impact
jfrifkfnfofifmk•1h ago
Mozilla rebranded itself as a "crew of activists". Browser is just a side business to generate revenue!
major505•1h ago
They are probably a money laundy scheme this days. I used to donate every year to Mozilla. Of course, small ammounts because Im not rich. Today they would have to beat this money from my hands.
erk__•49m ago
Is the whole issue not that they are less of a band of activists than they used to be. Now it is suddenly no longer about free and open source software, but more of means to run the whole machine, which is why they probably have profit oriented CEO as bad as that is.

IMO they need to be more a crew of activists than they are now. Fight against stuff like intrusion of AI in every single part of our lives and such.

dom96•1h ago
Genuinely can someone with knowledge of the business explain why they aren't simply doubling down on making Firefox better? Is there an existential problem facing them that they are trying to solve by adding AI into the browser?
K0nserv•1h ago
No knowledge of the business. But I think it's because of the underlying question that plagues Mozilla: How will that make money?
4gotunameagain•1h ago
They don't really need money. Look at Mozilla's CEO compensation for example. It was 7 million USD in 2022. Seven. Million. For ruining a bastion of the open internet.

The problem is the MBAs.

RobotToaster•54m ago
It still seems obscene to me that anyone at a non-profit, that begs for donations and volunteers, makes 7 figures.

(Yes it's technically a company, but it's a company owned by a non profit.)

pas•40m ago
did people ask the supervisors of the foundation what do they think about this?
pas•41m ago
multiple things can be true at once.

is that too much money for one person? well, apparently it depends on who do you ask. and even if the board members who approved it might thought it's too much, it still could have been cheaper than to fire the CEO and find a new one and keep Mozilla on track.

CEO compensation is usually a hedge against risks that are seen as even more costly, even if the performance of the CEO is objectively bad.

https://www.ecgi.global/sites/default/files/working_papers/d...

framing Mozilla/Firefox as some kind of bastion is simply silly - especially if it's supplied by the gigantic fortress kingdom of G, and makes more money on dividends and interest than on selling any actual products or services.

it's a ship at sea with a sail that's too big and a rudder that's unfortunately insignificant.

but whatever metaphor we pick it needs to transform into a sustainable ecosystem, be that donation or sales based.

drawfloat•7m ago
It's too much money for a non-profit that is failing by all possible metrics and is saying it is struggling for revenue.
pas•1h ago
it's a completely obvious "problem" -- more users are easier to monetize, even if they "simply" go the Wikipedia donations model

many people stated that they are happy to do targeted donations (ie. money earmarked strictly for Firefox development only, and it cannot be used for bullshit outreach programs and other fluff)

and if they figure out the funding for the browser (and other "value streams") then they can put the for-profit opt-in stuff on top

lopis•47m ago
I'm not sure how well know this is, but besides their contract with Google to be the default search option, Firefox does earn money through revenue share with all other default search options. A normal healthy company would just rely on those. Growing the user base would therefore grow the amount of rev-share income. So improving the product by itself, and thus attracting users, does make money - and probably enough to run Firefox and Mozilla. Just not enough to pay their CEO.
tessierashpool9•20m ago
Google pays Mozilla, Mozilla has more money, Mozilla spends more money (especially in compensations to a bloated C-level), Mozilla needs more money, Google threatens with paying less, Mozilla will lube up and bend over.
colesantiago•1h ago
What does "doubling down on making Firefox better?" mean?

What can Mozilla Firefox do to make their 500 million without Google?

philipallstar•59m ago
They could just make less money and deprioritise non-engineering/engineering-leadership personnel.
lukan•50m ago
In short, they could become a non profit again, with a single mission - build a open source browser with the interests of its users as first priority.
rvba•43m ago
They dont need to spend millions on other products and politics for start.
austhrow743•1h ago
Their Google dependency is their existential problem. They're limited by what they can do with "making Firefox better" while effectively being a client state. An off the books Google department. Doomed to forever being a worse funded Chrome because they can't do too much to anger their patron.

By selling browser UI real estate to AI companies[0] they reduce the power Google has over them. If they get to the point where no individual company makes up a majority of their revenue, it allows them to focus on their mission in a much broader way.

[0]These will be very expensive listings should this feature become popular: https://assets-prod.sumo.prod.webservices.mozgcp.net/media/u...

Krasnol•11m ago
Is there any prove for Googles influence on their development you outline here?
concinds•58m ago
You can't monetize a browser. They have to keep trying to create new products, but they inevitably fail. Pocket, FirefoxOS, Persona, all dead. This new stuff will fail too, because Mozilla has no USP and no way to create a best-in-class product in any market. So they rely on imitating what everyone else is doing, but with more "crunchy" vibes ("values", "trust", "we're a nonprofit") because that's the only angle they can compete on. They missed mobile completely so even their browser is bleeding users and dying.

The way to interpret Mozilla is that they're a dying/zombie company, fighting heroically to delay the inevitable.

RobotToaster•47m ago
They already do monetize it, every search engine included by default paid to be there. They forcefully remove those that don't pay from existing installations without the user's permission, as they did with yandex.
oneeyedpigeon•46m ago
> You can't monetize a browser.

You very much can if all the competitors are either a) ad-ridden, ai-infested, bloated monstrosities or b) don't provide the functionality people want. In that case, there's apparently lots of demand which could easily support either a pay-once or a low-subscription-fee model.

rvba•44m ago
They dont have to.

They could be lean and focus on firefox only.

Now they get 150m from google, spend just a part on firefox and rest on failures and hobby projects to get promoted.

If they were focued on core business, 1) they would have a war chest 2) they could leave off donations

https://lunduke.locals.com/post/4387539/firefox-money-invest...

NothingAboutAny•41m ago
I'd pay $10 a month for a browser, I pay that much for music and TV shows and I spend more time in a browser. I'm sure the market doesn't agree with me but I pay more for things that are less useful.
nikanj•36m ago
Society doesn't get improved by doing incremental work on a browser, and Mozilla's mission is to improve society
boobsbr•1h ago
The Mozilla Corporation has earned around USD ~500 million in 2023.

The Mozilla Foundation has received around USD ~26 million in 2023 in donation from the Mozilla Corporation (~70%) and other sources (~30%).

earthnail•1h ago
For someone not in the loop, can you explain the difference between the two orgs and maybe even explain what each org uses the money for?
swiftcoder•38m ago
The Foundation owns the trademarks, and mostly does evangelism. The (subsiduary) Corporation actually develops the browser (and accepts a bunch of revenue from Google for Search placement)
cardanome•54m ago
The Mozilla Foundation does lots of "spreading awareness" but does not contribute to Firefox development.

That is the most vexing part. I want to donate for Firefox development. Not marketing, not side projects, let me just fund the devs. But no, that is not possible.

Blender is a huge success story relying on sponsors and donations, Wikipedia is swimming in money but no we can't just have a free browser.

No we need to have a Mozilla Corporation that lives on Google money for being the controlled opposition i.e. technically avoiding monopoly situation thing. After all CEOs can't get rich on donations, can they?

forgotpwd16•29m ago
Ironically Wikimedia is also throwing money around to side projects, outreach, etc. But luckily for them their products are essentially run by volunteers.
jowea•1h ago
A decent chunk of the users who bothered installing an adblock would also be bothered enough to install a FF fork with adblock, so I doubt the revenue increase would be much.

As for calling it "off-mission": yes, what's even the point of FF if that's the route it goes on?

theasisa•1h ago
Do any of these forks have the ability to sync, either with Firefox or something self hosted? Or are they all just basically reskins with a single toggle added or such?
shantara•50m ago
LibreWolf has a Firefox Sync option, though it's disabled by default
elashri•49m ago
Yes you can actually self-host both Firefox sync server [1] and use Firefox accounts (which also can be self-hosted [2] and someone put something simpler in docker). And those can be used even with Firefox itself not only the forks.

[1] https://github.com/mozilla-services/syncstorage-rs

[2] https://mozilla.github.io/ecosystem-platform/tutorials/devel...

[3] https://github.com/jackyzy823/fxa-selfhosting

falcor84•43m ago
Good point. I'd actually be happy to pay a couple of bucks a month for a good syncing solution based on an open source protocol, to make it easier for me to use the same history and preferences across browsers, IDEs and other such tools. It's actually a similar need and setup to that of a password manager, so I wonder if this is something Bitwarden could take on.
master-lincoln•43m ago
I don't see how your 2 questions are related to each other.

> Do any of these forks have the ability to sync, either with Firefox or something self hosted?

The Firefox Sync web service is provided by Mozilla but can be self hosted: https://github.com/mozilla-services/syncstorage-rs. That could also be used in forks. See e.g. https://librewolf.net/docs/faq/#can-i-use-firefox-sync-with-... . I don't understand what you mean by sync with Firefox.

> Or are they all just basically reskins with a single toggle added or such?

Hard to generalize, but definitely not all of them. see e.g. https://lwn.net/Articles/1012453/

major505•1h ago
Well, is no mistery that today the best versioins of Firefox are the non official versions like waterfox and zen.

NObody trusts mozilla anymore, specially after they turned into an add company and started paying their CEOs exorbitating ammounts, considering what was being invested in their core business (supposedly making a better browser).

TurboSkyline•56m ago
I'm not familiar with Zen, but how do you reconcile that Waterfox frequently lags behind upstream Firefox in terms of security fixes? Yes, you get a perceived gain in privacy, but is that worth potentially exposing yourself to additional vulnerabilities?
MrAlex94•48m ago
> lags behind upstream Firefox in terms of security fixes

I’m not sure why this has become a thing - usually I either release Waterfox the week before ESR releases (the week the code freeze happens and new version gets tagged) or, if I’m actively working on features and they need to coincide with the next update I push, I will release on the same Tuesday the ESR releases.

You can check the GitHub tag history for Waterfox to see it’s been that way for a good while :)

iLoveOncall•1h ago
Unfortunately Firefox is basically already dead, it has an incredibly small market share and it will never grow again because their leadership is affected by the corporate mind virus.

I know most HN users are on Firefox, but they should get used to an alternative now, not when its inevitable death happens.

phito•1h ago
What's a good, non-chromium alternative?
notenlish•31m ago
Zen browser is quite nice. I've heard waterfox was good too.
Idiot211•1h ago
My key problem is not knowing what the real good alternatives are? I've trusted Mozilla for so long that I've fallen out of touch with a market that never really changed as much as it has in the last few years.
iLoveOncall•1h ago
I simply don't think there's an alternative that will tick all the boxes between UX, privacy, support, etc.
hhh•1h ago
do you have a source for hn users being mostly firefox users?
nottorp•46m ago
i can guess that a lot of them are ublock origin users
tcfhgj•22m ago
Firefox may be far from perfect, but somehow it's still the best option.
some_furry•1h ago
This Mozilla fiasco has convinced me that being a nonprofit isn't enough. We need a web browser that is actively hostile towards corporations and surveillance capitalism.
eviks•49m ago
Why hasn't the anti-corporate fiasco (not a single successful example) convinced you that it's not enough?
some_furry•35m ago
Corporations, private equity, the ever encroaching monopolies and centralization of economic power, the steady march towards authoritarianism... all of these things are connected and are making our lives shittier. We should oppose them.
swiftcoder•33m ago
> This Mozilla fiasco has convinced me that being a nonprofit isn't enough

I'm not sure to what extent Mozilla actually functions as a nonprofit. All the bits one cares about (i.e. FireFox) are developed by the for-profit subsidiary, which is at least somewhat beholden to Google/Microsoft for revenue...

nrhrjrjrjtntbt•19m ago
man curl
bluehex•1h ago
I just noticed last week that Chrome was putting multiple versions of some 4GB AI model [1] on my hard disk that I'd never asked for, so when I upgraded my laptop I took the opportunity to switch to Firefox, and now this.

My image of Mozilla as a bastion for user first software just shattered.

[1]: https://developer.chrome.com/docs/ai/get-started

bjord•50m ago
last I checked, firefox doesn't download AI models unless you try to use a (clearly-labeled) feature that requires them. you can also manage/uninstall them at about:addons

https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/on-device-models

totally uncharitable interpretation of the quote linked here aside, how is providing an interface for using fully local models not user first software?

chillfox•30m ago
If the users don't want the feature, then pushing it on them is not user first. It's that simple.
herobird•1h ago
It's kinda frustrating that Mozilla's CEO thinks that axing ad-blockers would be financially beneficial for them. Quite the opposite is true (I believe) since a ton of users would leave Firefox for alternatives.
hu3•1h ago
Mozilla has pressure from their sugar daddy, Google, to weaken ad-blockers.
buran77•48m ago
The only reason Mozilla matters in the eyes of Google is because it gives the impression there's competition in the browser market.

But Firefox's users are the kind who choose the browser, not use whatever is there. And that choice is driven in part by having solid ad-blockers. People stick with Firefox despite the issues for the ad-blocker. Take that away and Firefox's userbase dwindles to even lower numbers to the point where nobody can pretend they are "competition". That's when they lose any value for Google.

Without the best-of-the-best ad-blocking I will drop Firefox like a rock and move to the next best thing, which will have to be a Chromium based browser. I'll even have a better overall experience on the web when it comes to the engine itself, to give me consolation for not going to have the best ad-blocker.

agumonkey•58m ago
i left chrome to avoid ads.. i'd rather use dillo than ads infested firefox
mrtksn•57m ago
The whole web ecosystem was first run by VC money and everything was great until every corner was taken, the land grab was complete and the time to recoup the investment has come.

Once the users were trapped for exploitation, it doesn’t make sense to have a browser that blocks ads. How are they supposed to pay software salaries and keep the lights on? People don’t like paying for software, demand constant updates and hate subscriptions. They all end up doing one of those since the incentives are perverse, that’s why Google didn’t just ride the Firefox till the end and instead created the Chrome.

It doesn’t make sense to have trillion dollars companies and everything to be free. The free part is until monopolies are created and walled gardens are full with people. Then comes the monetization and those companies don’t have some moral compass etc, they have KPI stock values and analytics and it’s very obvious that blocking ads isn’t good financially.

shakna•46m ago
> The whole web ecosystem was first run by VC money

Huh? Nexus was funded by CERN.

Newsgrounds was never investor funded.

Yahoo! Directory was just two guys, and you paid to be listed. There were no investors involved.

WebCrawler was a university project. Altavista was a research project.

gr4vityWall•38m ago
People seem to forget the non-commercial web ever existed.
mrtksn•37m ago
That was ine inception age when very few people were online, its not the stage of mass adoption. The mass adoption starts with the dot.com era with mass infrastructure build up.

But sure, if you think that we should start counting from these years you can do that and add a "public funded" era at the beginning.

skydhash•24m ago
I came to the web after dotcom and most of the content (accessibke trough search) was blogs and forums. It wasn’t until SEO that fake content started to grow like weeds.
mrtksn•8m ago
That's the time when VC's were making huge investments into the web tech, most companies were losing crazy money.

The mentality of the age was portrayed like this in SV: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BzAdXyPYKQo

There were companies that were making some money but those were killed or acquired by companies that give their services for free. Google killed the blogs by killing their RSS reader since they were long into making money stage and their analytics probably demonstrated that it is better people search stuff than directly going to the latest blog posts.

It's the same thing everywhere, the whole industry is like that. Uber loses money until there's no longer viable competition then lose less money by jacking up the prices. The tech is very monopolistic, Peter Thiel is right about the tech business.

shantara•51m ago
Ditto. A fully functional uBlock Origin is the only remaining reason why I'm still sticking with Firefox despite everything
gvurrdon•48m ago
Containers are also very useful indeed; I have to log into various different Google and Github accounts and can do this in a single browser window.
ghusto•50m ago
Which alternatives though? On Mac at least, I'm not aware of any viable non-Chromium alternatives.
braebo•44m ago
Use Brave the privacy is better than Firefox already.
swiftcoder•42m ago
> On Mac at least, I'm not aware of any viable non-Chromium alternatives

Surely Mac is the only place there is a viable non-Chromium alternative (Safari)?

actionfromafar•38m ago
What problems do people have? I use Firefox on Mac since a decade at least.
saubeidl•18m ago
Zen is basically Firefox with Arc's UX. It's by far my favorite browser.
janv•13m ago
Orion is pretty viable alternative. Based on WebKit.
iso1631•14m ago
There's only two alternatives, safari and chrome-based browsers. Safari isn't cross platform either
nephihaha•11m ago
What is your opinion on Brave?
dhruv3006•1h ago
Correction : It has already killed itself.
9209561826•1h ago
Ok win
akimbostrawman•1h ago
They have been since a decade. After tripping down on unrelated political activism they do the same with AI.

Firefox is only good for getting forked into better browser like Mullvad Browser, LibreWolf and Tor Browser.

ACCount37•53m ago
I think AI in the browser could be useful. It just isn't that useful now.

So far, the most useful "AI feature" Firefox has ever shipped is the page translation system, which uses a local AI to work. I wouldn't mind seeing more of things like that.

Eventually, "browser use" skill in AIs is going to get better. And I'd trust Firefox with an official vendor agnostic "AI integration" interface, one that allows an AI of user's choice to drive it, over something like OpenAI's browser - made solely by one AI company for its own product.

ThatPlayer•12m ago
Yeah I use a plugin for similar translation functionality, but with a local llama.cpp instance instead. Definitely useful and has increased my usage. Also works nicely on the Android version of the app.
colesantiago•46m ago
How are they funded? Especially LibreWolf?

Curious if LibreWolf can survive the next 25 years or even longer than Firefox.

Grikbdl•1h ago
>> He says he could begin to block ad blockers in Firefox and estimates that’d bring in another $150 million, but he doesn’t want to do that. It feels off-mission.

> I read this as “I don't want to but I'll kill AdBlockers in Firefox for buckerinos ”.

I completely disagree. First of all the original quote is paraphrasing, so we don't know in which tone it was delivered, but calling something "off-mission" doesn't at all sound like "we'd do it for money" to me.

Krssst•58m ago
This is how I read it too, feels like a misinterpreted quote taken out of context. Everyone at Mozilla is probably well aware that removing adblockers would make them lose probably the majority of their users.
wtcactus•1h ago
Sincerely, I'm just using Firefox ATM because of Sidebery.

If I could use something similar on Brave, I would go back in an instant.

My main issues with FF are that it is a battery hog on MacOS, doesn't have AV1 playing capabilities (or it has, but I would need to go through some configuring that I don't need to do in other browsers) and sometimes it stalls in certain pages (that's probably not FF fault, but that the web developers don't optimize for it... but still, it's not a problem on Brave, so, I don't really care for apologising for it).

onli•1h ago
We are missing the context how the statement was said in the interview. The CEO is new and not used to the scrutiny that position brings, especially for Mozillas CEO given their purported ideals. It is quite possible he said this as something absurd -> "If making money was our only goal we would have some other options. We could for example disable all adblockers, to get more money from our advertising sponsor Google, at least 150 million USD. But we can not and won't do that, as it would feel completely off-mission for everyone and harm us long-term. So we always keep our mission in mind." Then the journalists shortens it to the blip in the verge article and the reaction twists it around a bit more, assuming disabling adblockers was on the table as a serious suggestion.

Or it could be it really was on the table since they just entered the advertising business and think AI is the future of Mozilla, a "fuck those freeloaders", heartfelt from the Porsche driving MBAs in Mozilla's management. Who knows. But it's a choice which interpretation one assumes.

twelvechess•1h ago
At least there are projects like ladybird coming up to fill their shows
tgv•41m ago
Don't count on it. Have you ever seen how much time and effort has been put in making Firefox, Safari and Chrome compliant and performant? It'll take Ladybird ages to get anywhere near.

Someone could try to merge e,g, V8 and Servo, once that's in decent shape. But even then it'll be time consuming to build an acceptable UI, cookie and history management, plugin interface, etc.

jemmyw•41m ago
And servo: I wish that one would get more mention as it's quite far along. Having multiple competing browsers again that are not controlled by megacorps would be great. Ladybird for browsing, Servo for embedding.
andai•1h ago
Oh no! There goes Google's antitrust insurance...
ekjhgkejhgk•1h ago
CEO

> He says he could begin to block ad blockers in Firefox and estimates that’d bring in another $150 million, but he doesn’t want to do that. It feels off-mission.

LOL the day that Firefox stops me from running what I want is the day I'll get rid of it.

Silhouette•16m ago
I still think it was a mistake for Firefox to dump its old plugin model. The customisation was a USP for Firefox and many useful tweaks and minor features have never been replaced.

Today the ability to run proper content blockers is still a selling point for Firefox but obviously wouldn't be if they started to meddle with that as well. (Has there ever been a more obvious case of anticompetitive behaviour than the biggest browser nerfing ad blocking because it's owned by one of the biggest ad companies?)

Other than customisation the only real advantage I see for Firefox today is the privacy angle. But again that would obviously be compromised if they started breaking tools like content blockers that help to provide that protection.

colesantiago•59m ago
The state of Mozilla's current 'products':

Firefox

Mozilla VPN

Mozilla Monitor

Firefox Relay

MDN Plus

Thunderbird

-

Some of these products are just repackaged partnerships.

-

Firefox - Funded by Google with the search partnership bringing in $500M in revenue. (free)

Mozilla VPN - Repackaged Mullvad VPN and using Mullvad servers.

Mozilla Monitor - Repackaged HaveIBeenPwned. (free)

Firefox Relay - No different to Simplelogin and not open source. (free)

MDN Plus - Be honest, you wouldn't pay for this since this was offered for a long time for free, MDN is already free.

Thunderbird - Most likely funded by Google (free) (using Firefox Search Revenue)

-

Be honest, would you pay for any of Mozilla's products when most of these can be found for free or close to free?

That is the problem.

homarp•49m ago
people do pay for Kagi.

the question is more "how to replace the free money from google by real clients,and still get the same margin as google free money"

tgv•39m ago
Isn't Thunderbird (more or less) independent? "Thunderbird operates in a separate, for-profit subsidiary of the Mozilla Foundation."
forgotpwd16•19m ago
Yeap. It's mentioned in their financial reports that user donations represent more than 99.9% of our annual revenue[0]. Also seems their staff is mainly engineers/developers, and all the expenses are concentrated to their product*. Thunderbird doing what Firefox should.

[0]: https://blog.thunderbird.net/2023/05/thunderbird-is-thriving...

*Though Thunderbird is Gecko-based so can be said in part, perhaps a significant one, they're depending on Firefox development.

colesantiago•19m ago
It doesn't matter if they are or not really.

As of right now Thunderbird doesn't make any money, it relies on 'Donations' which isn't at all sustainable.

I can see Thunderbird is planning to do a pro plan, but it is behind a waitlist so the total sum of revenue Thunderbird is making relative to Google's $500M deal is close to zero.

Ender-events•10m ago
Firefox relay is open source (https://github.com/mozilla/fx-private-relay) and have paid plan (1€/month)
ionwake•59m ago
I dont know how anyone could take mozilla seriously after they integrated google analytics into it about 10 years ago for no reason I can fathom. It immediately made me think somethings off, and I never used it again.

Instead I thought screw it and just went nuts deep into chrome, atleast it was more functional.

ps - ( apparently mozilla took it out sometime later , but to me the damage to its reputation was done)

lxgr•59m ago
>> He says he could begin to block ad blockers in Firefox and estimates that’d bring in another $150 million, but he doesn’t want to do that. It feels off-mission.

> It may be just me, but I read this as “I don't want to but I'll kill AdBlockers in Firefox for buckerinos ”.

Yes, that does seem like a pretty uncharitable interpretation of that quote. I read it as "we won't do it, even though it would bring in $150M USD".

chii•56m ago
> a pretty uncharitable interpretation

like hoping for the best, but planning for the worst, you must interpret people's intentions using the same methodology. By quoting that axing adblock could be bringing $150mil, but also saying that he doesn't want to do it, it's advertising that a higher price would work - it's a way to deniably solicit an offer.

SiempreViernes•23m ago
So then we should interpret Bruno adopting this uncharitable interpretation as evidence they are intentionally trying to ruin Mozillas reputation rather than sincerely analysing an interview, right?

And in turn my comment above is not a honest remark that your suggested interpretation strategy seems to be selectively applied, but rather an attempt to hurt your standing with your peers.

anothernewdude•56m ago
It wouldn't bring in their estimate, it'd kill the browser.
cryptonym•52m ago
Maybe they'd still get paid $150M for that, while only having to barely keep the browser alive, with no user request, for illusion of non-monopoly.

Fewer devs, more bucks, big win for the execs on the short term.

lifthrasiir•51m ago
The estimate does sound reasonable if it's an one-off payment. I agree that no one would pay that amount of money each year to keep adblocking from Firefox.
Croftengea•51m ago
Right? This is what all these MBAs and supply chain efficiency experts never get.
autoexec•25m ago
They don't care if their plans cause long term harm as long as they can cash out after the short term profits come in. As long as there are new companies/products to jump to and exploit next they're making money which is all they care about.
roenxi•50m ago
Yeah, the article's quoting didn't help its case. It doesn't seem fair to quote someone saying [I don't think X is a good idea] as evidence they are about to do X.

That being said, in the original context [0] it does sound a lot more like an option on the table. That original article presents it as the weakest of a list of things they're about to explore - but who knows, maybe the journalist has butchered what was said. It is an ambiguous idea without more context about how close it is to Mozilla trying to make life hard for ad-blockers.

[0] https://www.theverge.com/tech/845216/mozilla-ceo-anthony-enz...

autoexec•31m ago
The part about making money through advertising and selling data to 3rd parties (though "search and AI placement deals") is already not a good sign. Planning to make their money through ads and surveillance capitalism is already making it impossible to say "I always know my data is in my control. I can turn the thing off, and they’re not going to do anything sketchy"
kunley•18m ago
Except that expressing loud doubts about something ethically dubious is often a sign that an opposite action will be taken. So many business people want this moral excuse "but I had doubts" while being totally cynical
tdeck•9m ago
In addition "off-mission" is a pretty weak way to describe completely destroying your credibility and betraying your user base. Building the Firefox phone was off mission. Buying Pocket was off mission. Maybe it's just me, but selling your remaining faithful users down the river to make a quick buck from advertisers seems a little, I don't know... worse than that?
kuschku•49m ago
You wouldn't calculate the expected RoI of killing adblockers if killing adblockers was never considered.
boomboomsubban•41m ago
It's not hard to imagine the last contract negotiation with Google had them go "we'll give you $x if you kill manifest v2, $x-$150 million if you don't."

edited to correct my misunderstanding.

jamesnorden•28m ago
Firefox supports Manifest v3, they just didn't kill Manifest v2 after implementing it.
gr4vityWall•40m ago
> You wouldn't calculate the expected RoI of killing adblockers if killing adblockers was never considered.

I agree, although if someone isn't the kind of person who would calculate that, they're probably not the person who will become the CEO of a company that size in the first place. I don't think organizations have the right incentives in place to push people with those values to the top.

littlecranky67•39m ago
for it to be considered, somebody must have offered to pay that 150M. Or he considered going to somebody (we all know that somebody is Google) and asking them for that money in return for killing ad blockers.
takluyver•38m ago
I agree with all the people saying it would drive a lot of the remaining users away, and I hope they don't do it. But I'm not remotely surprised that they considered following what their biggest competitor (Chrome) already did.
tdeck•5m ago
Because Chrome was built by the world's biggest advertising company. If the World Wildlife Fund started selling ivory to pay the bills, would that not be surprising?
matwood•38m ago
Part of being CEO/running a business is considering all options, but it doesn't mean it will ever move beyond the ROI/risk phase. Ever read one of the risk assessments in a companies public filings? It's the same thing.
p-e-w•27m ago
All options that are in line with the organization’s mission.

The CEO of an organization like Mozilla even considering blocking adblockers for profit is like the president of Amnesty International considering to sell lists of dissidents to the secret police.

darkwater•4m ago
> The CEO of an organization like Mozilla even considering blocking adblockers for profit is like the president of Amnesty International considering to sell lists of dissidents to the secret police.

No, for Amnesty International it would be more like not considering somebody a political prisoner because the country that took the prisoner is a 1st world country and they don't want to expose themselves on a matter that would risk the donations from a certain population.

Yes, that happened in the aftermath of the Catalan attempt at peaceful independence in October 2017 by Amnesty International Spain.

duskdozer•36m ago
I could see myself saying something like that despite having no intention to do it. But I'm also not a CEO.
xenator•49m ago
Imagine you are in a marriage and your spouse say: "I can sleep with other people, doesn’t want to do that. It feels off-mission".

I don't understand context, but my honest reaction will be: "WTF, you just said? What type of relationship you think we have if we discuss such things?"

I definitely understand why people worry. This is just crazy to weight trust in money. If this is on the table and discussed internally, then what we are talking about?

'T' in Mozilla Firefox means 'Trust'.

Joker_vD•32m ago
Yeah, I've once said in a relationship "Look, sure, she maybe pretty, but I want to be with you, so no, I am not going to reach out to her, don't worry". Apparently, it was a poor way to word this idea.
nialv7•47m ago
The interpretation is not the problem. Whether he will do it, is actually secondary to the fact that he thinks cutting adblock can bringing in money.

No, it will just kill the browser. The fact he thinks otherwise tells me how out of touch he is.

p-e-w•31m ago
Firefox has a market share around 3%. Even most technologists stopped using it long ago. Many banks and government websites don’t even support it anymore and loudly tell people to use Chrome instead, especially in developing countries.

Nothing can kill Firefox, because it’s already dead for all practical purposes.

sharken•29m ago
Given the current state of the Chrome family of browsers and the anti adblocker stance from Google, i'd think that alone would guarantee Firefox a steady user base.

Not sure how users cope with Chrome-based browsers and intrusive ads.

lifthrasiir•25m ago
That's just a wishful thinking. Too many ordinary users accept ads as inevitable annoyances and don't even know about the very existence of adblockers.
purplehat_•8m ago
I've tried a few times to convince people in my life who would self describe as "bad with computers" to download an adblocker, but they usually find the friction too high. Adding extensions is unfamiliar for most, and even if it seems very basic for us, the non-tech people I know don't really want to deal with the risk of unknown unknowns from that, let alone switching to a healthier browser. (Perhaps reasonable since it feels like these days half the extensions on the Chrome Web Store are spyware or adware behind the scenes.)

I also suspect that those who lived through the days of frequent Windows errors and Chrome running out of memory all the time often expect software to fail in weird and unexpected ways, and a lot of people adopt a "don't fix it if it isn't broken" mindset.

Still, uBlock Lite and Brave browser are definitely easy wins and I'm glad to see more random people in my life using them than I would have expected. :)

graemep•28m ago
> Many banks and government websites don’t even support it anymore and loudly tell people to use Chrome instead, especially in developing countries.

I cannot remember the last time I came across one myself.

p-e-w•21m ago
It very strongly depends on which country you live in.
darkwater•11m ago
In which country are you seeing that?

For me the biggest offender are usually Google products and sometimes the lazy-coded website written by incompetents and whose audience is the tech illiterate (i.e. some websites involving schools/teaching) that just tell you "use latest Chrome just to be sure, download here" to, well, just be sure. Notable mentions for government websites that are like 10 years in the past and that are still on the "Supports Firefox" side because, well, they are just always late to everything.

rbits•3m ago
I live in Australia and I can't log into government services using my myGov account on Firefox. Works fine on Chromium.
tda•27m ago
I use Firefox as my daily browser. If i have a website that fails to work, I might try chrome maybe once every two months. And then it usually also doesn't work. So for all browsing I do on the internet, Firefox works like a charm
sysguest•16m ago
well I use it because it can handle 2000 tabs on my m1 macbook air (16gb ram)

... damn do I have adhd?????

CodesInChaos•8m ago
Get the OneTab extension. It'll save and close all those tabs. That way you won't have Firefox crashing during startup once you exceed the number of tabs it can handle (a few thousand).
Cthulhu_•20m ago
When they say "don't support it anymore", does that mean they're back to the IE era of using Chrome specific technologies so it doesn't work in any browser, do they use user-agent sniffing and show a big popup, or is it just that they're not testing it in FF anymore? The latter shouldn't be an issue as long as they use standards, the only thing they would run into in this day and age is browser specific bugs - but Safari seems to have that the most.
p-e-w•17m ago
No, they mostly just show a popup telling you to use Chrome. Websites work fine if you switch the user agent.
walrus01•18m ago
> Many banks and government websites don’t even support it

Because their web developers are too lazy to write anything to proper standards. They're doing some kind of lazy "Check for Chrome, because everyone must be running that, if not, redirect to an Unsupported page".

I've yet to find a website that "refuses" to work in Firefox which doesn't work just fine when I use a user agent switching extension to present a standard Chrome on MacOS or Chrome on Windows useragent.

iso1631•16m ago
Wikimedia stats from last year put it at 15% of desktop browsers, ahead of Safari and Edge.
embedding-shape•7m ago
Yeah, every website has different stats about user-agents, depends a lot on the types of users you attract. I bet HN has Firefox usage ratio above 15% for sure, while sites like Instagram probably has way below the global average.

Global browser marketshare never made much sense. You need to figure out what your users use, then aim to be compatible for most of those, and ignore any global stats.

Timwi•6m ago
I wouldn't be surprised if there's a correlation between people frequenting Wikimedia websites and people using Firefox. It would be nice to know.
guenthert•9m ago
Is it him or is it you? I'd think within the Mozilla organization is a data trove of telemetry which renders a fairly good picture of how many users actually are using ad blockers.
kace91•42m ago
“I wouldn’t sell sexual services. I’ve spent an evening checking the going market rate for someone my age in my area and it’s 2k! Can you believe that? That’s a ton of money! Totally not going to do it though”.

It’s an eyebrow raising comment at the very least.

hsbauauvhabzb•39m ago
I’d happily pay $100 a year for Firefox WITH an adblocker as long as part of the money is put towards ongoing internet freedom and preventing attestation
arealaccount•22m ago
Orion browser is a thing
saubeidl•17m ago
A closed source thing.
RossBencina•30m ago
> It feels off-mission.

That's supposedly The Verge paraphrasing the CEO (Unfortunately I can't verify because the full article requires subscription.) I would like to know what the CEO actually said because "it feels off-mission" is a strange thing for the leader of the mission to say. I would hope that they know the mission inside out. No need to go by feels.

autoexec•22m ago
Here's that part of the article:

> In our conversation, Enzor-DeMeo returns often to two things: that Mozilla cares about and wants to preserve the open web, and that the open web needs new business models. Mozilla’s ad business is important and growing, he says, and he worries “about things going behind paywalls, becoming more closed off.” He says the internet’s content business isn’t exactly his fight, but that Mozilla believes in the value of an open and free (and thus ad-supported) web.

> At some point, though, Enzor-DeMeo will have to tend to Mozilla’s own business. “I do think we need revenue diversification away from Google,” he says, “but I don’t necessarily believe we need revenue diversification away from the browser.” It seems he thinks a combination of subscription revenue, advertising, and maybe a few search and AI placement deals can get that done. He’s also bullish that things like built-in VPN and a privacy service called Monitor can get more people to pay for their browser. He says he could begin to block ad blockers in Firefox and estimates that’d bring in another $150 million, but he doesn’t want to do that. It feels off-mission.

> One way to solve many of these problems is to get a lot more people using Firefox. And Enzor-DeMeo is convinced Mozilla can get there, that people want what the company is selling. “There is something to be said about, when I have a Mozilla product, I always know my data is in my control. I can turn the thing off, and they’re not going to do anything sketchy. I think that is needed in the market, and that’s what I hope to do.”

csomar•25m ago
> It feels off-mission.

He didn't say it is off-mission. But just that it feels. My guess is that he is looking at a higher number.

dizhn•22m ago
That's peanuts. Google would pay them a lot more to disable adblocking for good. And it sounds like this guy would do it for the right amount. That said, it is kind of a lackluster article.
tokai•18m ago
Oh no, we're not supposed to actually parse the words a CEO spew forth. Get out of here.
kristjank•3m ago
Do you really harbor so much charity towards tech CEOs that you can't see its other meaning as at least equally as likely?

It costs Mozilla literally nothing to reassure its privacy and user-controlled principles. Instead we got a jk...unless... type of response. This is cowardice and like another commenter has said, a negotiation offer disguised as a mission statement.

CamouflagedKiwi•58m ago
Amazing how they continue not to cater to their core audience. They literally have lost 90% of their market share from their peak, I guess I can see the temptation to try to regain it by reaching out to others, but doing that at the expense of your core is a terrible business strategy. It's not like those users are all that sticky, they're leaving as Mozilla pisses them off, and likely Mozilla are going to be left with what they stand for - which these days is nothing.

It's sad, I'm sure there was a better path Mozilla could have taken, but they've had a decade or more of terrible management. I wonder if the non-profit / corp structure hasn't helped, or if it's just a later-stage company with a management layer who are disconnected from the original company's mission and strategy.

tigranbs•57m ago
Firefox has been lagging in Web features for a long time. I have been a Zen browser user for about a year, and recently moved back to Arc just because almost all interactive websites look bad on the Firefox engine; somehow, they don't have the same level of JS API support as Chrome does, especially for WebRTC, Audio, or Video. And this is frustrating that they think the problem is the AdBlockers!
bjord•57m ago
I didn't read it that way. I read it as him acknowledging that would be a poor choice and therefore that mozilla won't do it.
nextlevelwizard•53m ago
Literally only reason to use Firefox is that it still blocks ads properly.

If Mozzilla brings AI or removes ad blocks then they are every way just worse Chrome and there is zero reason to use them over Chrome.

I guess I should already start porting my Firefox extensions over to Chrome since this ship is sinking stupid fast.

WhereIsTheTruth•51m ago
Mozilla received $555 million from Google in 2023

Half a billion, they are both milking and lying to you

nephihaha•15m ago
I suspected it would be something like this.
on_the_train•51m ago
The fact that they even have a CEO is mind boggling to me
nephihaha•14m ago
A lot of things are not what they pretend to be. Wikipedia is another example.
elAhmo•50m ago
Has anything positive came out from or about Mozilla in the past few months or years?
TavsiE9s•42m ago
I'd say Rust.
swiftcoder•37m ago
Rust is already a teenager...
globular-toast•47m ago
Wait, how could "blocking ad blockers" bring in money at all?
swiftcoder•36m ago
Certain advertising firms are likely to pay a nice big sum to make sure ads are being delivered
1GZ0•46m ago
Yes, and they've been at it for a while. its honestly hard to watch.
throwaway81523•43m ago
"I think no one wants AI in Firefox, Mozilla" https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45926779
exceptione•41m ago
What Firefox needs is a new steward and move out, literally. The unruly business practices aren't just normalized, they are an expectation. The blathering ceo wasn't even aware his job is to hide that. The fox will die in this toxic ecosystem.
rado•40m ago
Just when I re-started using it because of the vertical tabs.
fijuv•40m ago
I think it's too late for Mozilla, since it seems they already squandered most of their good will, userbase and money.

At any rate, I think their only good path of to get rid of Gecko.

The best would be to replace it with a finished version of Servo, which would give them a technically superior browser, assuming Google doesn't also drop Blink for Servo. It may be too late for this, but AI agents may perhaps make finishing Servo realistic.

The other path would be to switch to Chromium, which would free all the Gecko developers to work on differentiating a Chromium-based Firefox from Chrome, and guarantee that Firefox is always better than Chrome.

takluyver•24m ago
I doubt AI agents are going to greatly accelerate the development of something as big and complex as Servo. It seems more realistic that Firefox would be built around either Blink (from Chromium) or Webkit to lean on Google/Apple.
saubeidl•15m ago
If they switch to Chromium, they'll just become yet another Chrome rebrand. It'll kill what makes their browser special.
Iolaum•37m ago
The web without ublock origin is a hellscape. Whenever I try another browser, I immediately go back to firefox.

Do these people even know their users?

For example: Fedora Silverblue default Firefox install had an issue with some Youtube videos due to codecs. So I tried watching youtube on Chromium. Ads were so annoying I stopped watching by the second time I tried to watch a video. Stopped watching youtube until I uninstalled default firefox install and added Firefox from flathub. If the option to use a good adblocker gets taken away I 'll most likely dramatically reduce my web browsing.

P.S. Maybe someone ports Vanadium to desktop Linux? If firefox goes away that 'd be my best case desktop browser. Using it on my mobile ;)

nephihaha•12m ago
I prefer Brave but already have suspicions about that too.
littlecranky67•37m ago
You can't kill ad-blockers in a browser, unless you don't allow running AI models in browsers (which will become very soon an integral part of your browsing usage - for some of us it already is, mostly through extension).

I will one day just add "Remove all ads on the page I am browsing" into my BROWSER_AI.md file.

gr4vityWall•36m ago
> Mozilla believes in the value of an open and free (and thus ad-supported) web.

> and thus ad-supported

What a sad view of the web. Advertisement is a net-negative for society.

saubeidl•10m ago
It's a business wankers view of the web.

Only what makes money has any value in their view. That's also why MBA types are the wrong type of person to run something like Mozilla.

Zardoz84•34m ago
Time to migrate to a Firefox fork
wzrr•32m ago
going to die anyway
dizhn•23m ago
> I've been using Firefox before it was called that.

Call me petty but I still can't let this one go. At the time they basically stole the Firebird name from the database project and did not hesitate to use AOL's lawyers to bully the established owners of the name. So they didn't actually become shady over night. It's in their DNA.

tonyedgecombe•23m ago
> He says he could begin to block ad blockers in Firefox and estimates that’d bring in another $150 million, but he doesn’t want to do that. It feels off-mission.

It would be amusing if the only browser left that could run ad-blockers was Safari.

andyjohnson0•23m ago
Long-time Firefox user* here. If Mozilla weakens the ability to block ads, and/or introduces intrusive AI features that I can't easily disable, then I'm done. I'll go to Waterfox or whatever. Tired of Mozilla's attitude.

* Windows and Android. I even pay for their vpn because there is apparently no way to pay for the browser, which is what I actually use.

jb1991•22m ago
So what browsers will be left if Firefox kills ad blockers. This seems to be happening to all the major browsers.
egorfine•19m ago
They're between a rock and a hard place. Introduce AI and alienate whatever users you have left. Do not introduce AI and alienate whatever investors you have left.
shit_game•18m ago
It's so tiring how everything around us is being engineered to make us miserable for the sake of profit. That in itself creates misery, almost seemingly for the sake of misery. A just world would punish this behavior.
nephihaha•12m ago
It's about control, not profit. Many of these projects are unprofitable. Mozilla will lose business off this.
saubeidl•13m ago
It feels like the only reasonable path forward would be for the EU to buy Mozilla and fund it as a public resource.

Capital extraction is fundamentally opposed to user freedom. If we want an open web, we, the people need to be maintaining it and not rely on MBA types to do it for us.

fedeb95•11m ago
It will bring 150 millions the first year, but the next one?
vintermann•7m ago
Sorry to get on one of my political hobby horses but...

We actually need to consider the possibility that yes, it is. More precisely, that the new CEO is trying to do that.

It doesn't take a grand conspiracy to join an organisation on false premises. It's totally easy. You can, today, go join a political party without agreeing with them at all, with the intent to sabotage them. Or another organization, including a workplace.

And just like some people just lie for amazingly little reason, I'm increasingly convinced some people do this. Maybe for a sense of control, maybe because they think they'll get rewarded. For every person who holds a crazy belief in public, there's probably one who holds the same belief but doesn't feel the need to let others in on it. As the world gets more paranoid, it'll get worse, open fears are the top of the iceberg.

If Enzor-Demeo ends up tanking Mozilla, there are plenty of people who will be happy with that. It's not as if his career will be over, far from it. Ask Nick Clegg or Stephen Elop. We all need to wake up to the idea that maybe the people who are supposed to be on our side aren't actually guaranteed to be unless we have solid mechanisms in place to ensure it.

adornKey•6m ago
I think the writing for Mozilla was on the wall for a solid decade now. The time to look for alternatives and to switch to other (pretty unknown) niche browsers was at least 5 years ago. I don't even remember the time when I downloaded and used Firefox anymore.
jillesvangurp•5m ago
I think blocking ad blockers (the whole FFing point of using Firefox is freedom to do use those) would be the shortest path for him out of the door as a CEO.

It's so tone deaf that it is likely to probe the community into drastic action if he were to attempt to push that through. Including probably much of the developer community. I'm talking the kind of action that boils down to forking and taking a large part of the user base along. Which is why that would be very inadvisable.

The problem with being a CEO of a for profit corporation, which is what he is, is that his loyalty is to shareholders, not to users. The Mozilla Foundation and the corporation are hopelessly inter dependent at this point. The foundation looks increasingly like a paper tiger given the decision making and apparent disconnect with its user base which it is supposed to serve.

All the bloated budgets, mis-spending on offices, failed projects, fancy offices, juicy executive salaries at a time where revenue from Google continued to be substantial all while downsizing developer teams and actually laying some off isn't a great look. Stuff like this just adds to the impression that they are increasingly self serving hacks that don't care about the core product: Firefox. This new CEO isn't off to a great start here.