• @[email protected]
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    4 months ago

    It’s a thing.

    Remember how the cloud is someone else’s server? Now you can buy it (or lease) and bring it home, and it becomes only sorta someone else’s.

    Amazon and Azure offer their own on-prem products.

    • @[email protected]
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      94 months ago

      “Locally hosted” means it’s running on the local host. In this case, that would mean on the same computer running Firefox.

      Calling something that is only accessible over the internet “locally hosted” is outrageous doublespeak.

          • @[email protected]
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            4 months ago

            If they had said “locally hosted in our datacenter” would you be confused why they didn’t move a rack into your house?

            My question is why are you projecting your limited interpretation as a global truth?

            • Mr. Satan
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              54 months ago

              In IT context local is a well establised term. It’s either hosted locally, i. e. on machine running the browser or not. A datacenter or cloud are remote machines also by the same well established definition.

            • @[email protected]
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              44 months ago

              If they had said “locally hosted in our datacenter”

              Then that would also be an oxymoron.

              Local is the opposite of remote. This is a remote server. Remote servers are not local. This is not a matter of interpretation.

              • @[email protected]
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                4 months ago

                It is, actually. It is local to them, it is remote to you. They are differentiating from a remote server in someone else’s datacenter. It is not that confusing.

                • Draconic NEO
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                  14 months ago

                  Local to them isn’t what is meant when an AI is claimed to be local. OpenAI could claim ChatGPT is local by the same logic. It’s still not locally hosted by the established definition, and neither is Mozilla’s.

                • @[email protected]
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                  4 months ago

                  This is a FAQ for end users, about a feature in software running on end users’ computers.

                  It is absolutely doublespeak to call it “local”. Are we supposed to invent an entirely new term now to distinguish between remote and local? Please do not accept this usage. It will make meaningful communication much harder.

                  Edit: I mean seriously, by this token OpenAI, Google, Facebook, etc. could call their servers “locally hosted”. It is an utterly meaningless term if you accept this usage.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    24 months ago

                    We actually do have better terminology for “local to Mozilla” and “remote to Mozilla”… It’s first party and third party.

                    And, from the looks of it, Mozilla is indeed using Google Cloud Services as a third party, according to their privacy policy.

            • @[email protected]
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              34 months ago

              The language is confusing, and Mozilla should fix it themselves.

              The important takeaway is: data is sent over an IP address controlled by Google, to a remote server, running Google software. No processing is taking place on someone’s local computer.

    • smpl
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      14 months ago

      lol, I think we’re giving too little credit to the marketing people in tech. I want to read their blogs!

    • @[email protected]
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      14 months ago

      Information We Share.

      We use third parties to provide the Service to you, and have contracted with these companies requiring them to protect your information (Third-Party Services):

      Google Cloud Platform. Google Cloud Platform (GCP) is a cloud-computing platform. We use GCP to manage services that facilitate responses to user prompts and page summarization.

      https://orbitbymozilla.com/privacy