cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/46655413

The Mozilla Foundation, the non-profit arm of the Firefox browser maker Mozilla, has laid off 30% of its employees as the organization says it faces a “relentless onslaught of change.”

      • @[email protected]
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        2916 days ago

        Let’s just separate GOOG from Chrome / Chromium and Google Search completely. So that the direction of the most used browser, most used search engine and the biggest advertiser don’t circle jerk each other.

      • @Gemini24601
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        1516 days ago

        Also, Ladybird is looking very promising, so in a few years we should have a true fourth browser engine.

    • @T156
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      5216 days ago

      If Mozilla does become defunct, it does raise the question of whether Chrome would be considered a Google monopoly, and therefore subject to antitrust legislation.

      I can’t imagine any governments would look kindly upon internet access being guarded behind a single company’s product.

      • @[email protected]
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        3616 days ago

        I can’t imagine any governments would look kindly upon internet access being guarded behind a single company’s product.

        laughs in 2001

      • @douglasg14b
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        2215 days ago

        Google should be subject to antitrust legislation regardless.

        Their position as a monopoly is what enables this.

      • @mostlikelyaperson
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        915 days ago

        The firefox browser could exist without quite a lot Mozilla does. A large chunk of its cash isn’t spent on the browser.

      • @[email protected]
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        716 days ago

        There is a new browser based on WebKit (safari), called Orion that looks promising. However, it’s only on macOS and iOS at this point. Hopefully Linux and Android will be a consideration at some point.

        • @[email protected]
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          815 days ago

          There’s also a new browser based on Firefox/Gecko called Zen. There’s way too many browsers based on Webkit or Blink.

        • @grue
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          816 days ago

          Chrome’s engine was originally forked from WebKit. That makes them too similar (even years later) for WebKit to count as a real alternative.

          • @[email protected]
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            616 days ago

            The point is to leave a google controlled ecosystem… which means it counts as a valid alternative. What would you suggest besides chromium and gecko?

              • @[email protected]
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                215 days ago

                Haha. So I really do wish that all websites had a text version, or like markdown. Can you imagine how damn speedy things would be? Every website would have the same layout. As much as I appreciate good web design, there’s a lot of bad UI choices out there.

          • @[email protected]
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            115 days ago

            I strongly disagree with this. In practice, supporting chrome does not imply supporting safari and vice versa. In particular, Safari is much, much slower about adopting new web technologies. Google basically implements support for anything they can think up, Apple waits for it become a ratified standard and then implements it only if they want to. Their JavaScript implementations are also completely different.

        • @T156
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          516 days ago

          The split might leave a monopoly still, if it’s the only major browser.

          • @ChapulinColorado
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            16 days ago

            It would be a lot easier to compete with though, since Google couldn’t treat it as a loss leader that still bring them in search revenue by default.

      • @[email protected]
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        115 days ago

        They could try to employ some kind of Apple defense, like, you wouldn’t hit Apple for having monopoly on iOS. As long as it’s not the only solution on the market. And for web, most of time, you could access the same resources and get similar experience by downloading… the apps… wait, they have a monopoly on that, too. Well, they are completely screwed in that case.

    • DarkThoughts
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      415 days ago

      If this Firefox trend continues, then we won’t really have a choice in the matter anymore.

      • @[email protected]
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        315 days ago

        That’s good. Are you happy with the built-in privacy, or do you find extensions are needed?

        I’d still argue it’s chromium.

        • @[email protected]
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          114 days ago

          I’m happy with the built-in privacy, muchly because I’m using it on a work computer so I have no expectation of real privacy anyway.

          And fair.

  • @PetteriPano
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    25616 days ago

    Gee, I can’t imagine why they chose to drop this bomb today.

    It’s like they wanted it to be drowned in other news.

      • Victor
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        215 days ago

        I’m seeing it

    • @slaacaa
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      1315 days ago

      Why, what else happened today?

      Tap for spoiler

      /s

    • Edgarallenpwn
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      115 days ago

      I brought it up with my family, my tech friends and coworkers and half the them just blankly stared at like I didn’t know what was happening. Both are important, one more than the other though.

  • @Olap
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    11516 days ago

    CEO first please. He’s not worth it

  • @linearchaos
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    11016 days ago

    I suspect their financial position has changed. Perhaps Google’s being found as a monopoly has made them decide not to help fund Mozilla’s efforts as substantially.

    Ashley Boyd lead the advocacy team, here’s the kind of stuff they were doing:

    https://blog.mozilla.org/en/mozilla/mozilla-welcomes-ashley-boyd-vp-of-advocacy/

    In fall of 2016, Mozilla fought for common-sense copyright reform in the EU, creating public education media that engaged over one million citizens and sending hundreds of rebellious selfies to EU Parliament. Earlier in 2016, Mozilla launched a public education campaign around encryption and emerged as a staunch ally of Apple in the company’s clash with the FBI. Mozilla has also fought for mass surveillance reform, net neutrality and data retention reform.

    https://techcrunch.com/2024/11/05/mozilla-foundation-lays-off-30-staff-drops-advocacy-division/

    “The Mozilla Foundation is reorganizing teams to increase agility and impact as we accelerate our work to ensure a more open and equitable technical future for us all. That unfortunately means ending some of the work we have historically pursued and eliminating associated roles to bring more focus going forward,” read the statement shared with TechCrunch.

    Reading between the lines, I’d keep an eye on them collecting your data and consider one of the privacy-focused forks.

    • Kilgore Trout
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      1016 days ago

      consider one of the privacy-focused forks

      The Foundation is not linked to Firefox.

      • @linearchaos
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        15 days ago

        If by not linked you mean wholly owned by…

        https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/about/governance/organizations/

        The Mozilla Corporation, a wholly owned subsidiary of the Mozilla Foundation, works with the community to develop software that advances Mozilla’s principles. This includes the Firefox browser, which is well recognized as a market leader in security, privacy and language localization. These features make the Internet safer and more accessible.

    • chingadera
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      016 days ago

      Hundreds of selfies? Let’s go ahead and strike that vein bullshit from the record.

    • @douglasg14b
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      1515 days ago

      This is more of a symptom the cause is the monopolization of the internet largely by Google

    • @TheGrandNagus
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      1215 days ago

      Unfortunately I don’t think there’s much Mozilla can do other than cut costs with it seeming like the Google funding will be getting severely hampered.

      They can’t get money from thin air.

    • @PlasticExistence
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      5616 days ago

      It’s looking increasingly likely that the US Department of Justice is going to succeed in their antitrust efforts against Google. Currently, Mozilla gets something like 85% of their funding from Google for being the default search engine in Firefox. That may be deemed anticompetitive behavior by a judge, at which point Mozilla will be left with very little funding compared to their current situation.

      I’d bet these actions are in anticipation of that happening.

      • @[email protected]
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        2516 days ago

        Yeah, and although it will be painful for Mozilla in the short term - it would be a good outcome. It was always bad that Mozilla’s main source of funding was from their most powerful competitor. It’s an obvious conflict of interest. And obvious way to skew decision making. … But that money is just so addictive.

        There will be some pretty severe withdrawal symptoms if the money gets taken away, but everyone will be healthier in the long run… unless the overpaid CEO continues to suck in all the remaining money and leaves nothing for the people actually doing the work. That would be bad. In that case, if the corporate structure chokes the company to death, I suppose we’d be hoping for Ladybird, or something like it to take Firefox’s place.

  • @snowcrushed573
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    3816 days ago

    Everytime I see comments regarding Mozilla’'s financials,I have the same effing question: How does a company like brave or opera maintain their browser ?? AFAIK both don’t have the level of community backing that Mozilla does nor do they have any (again AFAIK) agreement with a company like google for default search engine placement

      • @snowcrushed573
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        415 days ago

        Fair enough. Didn’t think that maintaining the engine is what Mozilla spends majority of it’s Firefox budget on

        • @douglasg14b
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          615 days ago

          The grand majority of Mozilla’s spending is for engineers.

    • @[email protected]
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      15 days ago

      those are just rebranded chrome(ium). all browsers except firefox and safari are rebranded chromium or firefox. edit: there are some other projects but none are mature.

      • tb_
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        415 days ago

        Apple also maintains their own browser engine, but that’s Apple.

          • tb_
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            15 days ago

            Ah, I guess I read over the first bit to where you mentioned the rebrands, which didn’t include Safari.

            To still add some useful information: all browsers on iOS are rebranded Safari, because Apple only permits their own browser engine.

            (The EU ruling may change this, however)

    • @douglasg14b
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      3915 days ago

      They use chromium.

      Firefox does not.

      The grand majority of software engineering effort goes into the browser development that they never have to work on for the most part.

    • fatalicus
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      1515 days ago

      Brave just tries to scam their users for money.

      Like when they added “donate to the content creator” links on YouTube and such, then didn’t actually give the money to the content creators.

    • @rottingleaf
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      215 days ago

      BTW, about Opera - the newest events with OpenAI and other stuff and Winamp devs not being prosecuted for GPL violations all lead me to one thought.

      Are leaked Presto sources really-really illegal to use?

    • @[email protected]
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      215 days ago

      Alongside what the other guy said, Opera definitely does have search engine deals, idk about brave since they launched their own. But brave has their own private advertising system

  • nifty
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    3515 days ago

    God bean counters ruin everything good related to tech

    • @[email protected]
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      1215 days ago

      wouldn’t it be nice if the profit motive wasn’t the only driving force of the economy?

  • @Reygle
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    2715 days ago

    All of my favorite browsers are forks of Firefox. Lately it’s been Zen browser. Watching Firefox smoulder and collapse over the years has been truly painful and makes me fear a chromium future in hell.

    • @Nino477
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      315 days ago

      Same. In the late 2000s or so my father knew ot so much about computers so some family friend set it up and he installed Firefox. I ve been using Firefox my whole life since. I tried switching to ungoogled chromeium, Brave and cromite on mobile but just can’t. Like Firefox and its forks are in my muscle memory. It’s over. I won’t be able to use the internet anymore. Bye guys 👋

  • @Marthirial
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    1816 days ago

    Their question is: how much would you pay for not using a Chromium based browser?

    People switching to the browser and zapping all ads, demanding open source and vitriol for any kind of monetization. How can they survive? They would have to become a subsidized utility, which not even the Internet as a whole has achieved.

    • @[email protected]
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      515 days ago

      I wouldn’t mind paying money for a good browser. I paid for Opera back in the day, and browsers are significantly more complex (and cost several orders of magnitude more to develop) now compared to back then.

    • @[email protected]
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      115 days ago

      There was a poll a while back on mastodon and the majority answered they’d be ok with 5$/year to support Firefox.

      • @TheGrandNagus
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        315 days ago

        The kind of people you find on Mastodon following Firefox news are not the same as the average person. They are a bubble.

        A few thousand people paying $5 per year is not enough to replace hundreds of millions.

        • @[email protected]
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          115 days ago

          A few thousand people paying $5 per year is not enough to replace hundreds of millions.

          …people or dollars? ‘Cos i don’t think “hundreds of millions” of people are chippin’ in, it’s Google that’s financing “hundreds of millions” of dollars…

          But yeah, that target audience is a bubble, normies don’t care.

          • @TheGrandNagus
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            115 days ago

            Dollars.

            Google is giving hundreds of millions because they fear regulators getting involved.

            A handful of people who follow Mozilla on Mastodon saying they’re willing to pay up to a meagre $5 per year won’t do anything.

    • @panicnow
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      -215 days ago

      I get not wanting to use a google, microsoft or crypto laden browser, but I would be willing to use a well supported browser that used chromium as the page rendering engine. It seems to be extremely difficult to get another engine to be competitive in the marketplace. Maybe the resources would be better spent putting the chromium engine inside a different container. I’m sure there would be drawbacks, but I think there would be compatibility benefits too.

      • @[email protected]
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        015 days ago

        used chromium as the page rendering engine.

        I believe WebKit is Chromium’s rendering engine, as is Gecko for Firefox.

        Opera used to have their own but now they’re just rebranded Chromium.

    • FaceDeer
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      1816 days ago

      Not necessarily. If they’re low on cash then cutting unnecessary costs is not unreasonable. What is Mozilla’s core goal? Perhaps the “advocacy” and “global programs” divisions weren’t all that relevant to it, and so their funding is better put elsewhere.

      • Virkkunen
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        215 days ago

        Let’s wait and see how this funding won’t be talked about ever again and later on the CEO coincidentally gets yet another raise

  • @just_another_person
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    1416 days ago

    WTF. They had $1b banked a few days ago. This is a bit reactionary perhaps?

    • @[email protected]
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      815 days ago

      They’re likely preparing for their funding from Google to be cut. Having a lot of money in the bank doesn’t matter if your income is lower than expenses, since you’ll run out of money eventually.

      • @just_another_person
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        215 days ago

        Expecting millions to be cut is still extreme when you have a fucking billion in the bank.

        • @[email protected]
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          15 days ago

          They get around $500 million per year from Google, so $1 billion is just two years worth of that. 86% of Mozilla’s revenue comes from that Google deal.

    • @GreenKnight23
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      716 days ago

      well you see. all the cool kids are laying off staff and Mozilla wants to hang out at their pool next summer.