Thought this was interesting and worth knowing about

  • barnaclebutt
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    153 hours ago

    Who is the moron at Mozilla that thought it would be a good idea to sell user information, and how much does he make a year?

    • @[email protected]
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      $6M, but if you look at the California law that spurred this change, the Privacy Policy that hasn’t changed since July 2024, and the revised ToS, this looks mostly like a really, really, really stupid communication error.

      It’s one of those cases where legally, “sell” includes things that most people wouldn’t consider a sale in normal parlance, but Mozilla has to comply with the overbroad legal definition; meanwhile, they don’t appear to be fundamentally changing anything about how they’re operating.

      ETA: I’m still moving to LibreWolf (and maybe Ladybird later on). I’m not a lawyer, and expecting people like me to parse legal definitions of commonly understood words is just asinine.

  • @[email protected]
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    5 hours ago

    Thunderbird May Disclose Information To: Mozilla Affiliates: Thunderbird is a project of MZLA Technologies Corporation, a subsidiary of Mozilla Foundation and an affiliate of Mozilla Corporation, and as such, shares some of the same infrastructure. This means that, from time to time, your data (e.g., crash reports, and technical and interaction data) may be** disclosed to Mozilla Corporation and Mozilla Foundation**. If so, it will be maintained in accordance with the commitments we make in this Privacy Notice.

    DNS servers, Standard Autoconfiguration URIs, and Mozilla’s Configuration Database: To simplify the email set-up process, Thunderbird tries to determine the correct settings for your account by contacting Mozilla’s configuration database as well as external servers. These include DNS servers and standard autoconfiguration URIs. During this process, your email domain may be sent to Mozilla’s configuration database, and your email address may be disclosed to your network administrators.

    Amazon Web Services: Thunderbird uses Amazon Web Services (AWS) to host its servers and as a content delivery network. Your device’s IP address is collected as part of AWS’s server logs.

    Email address providers (Desktop Only Legacy): Prior to version 128, Thunderbird partnered with Gandi.net and Mailfence to allow you to create a new email address through Thunderbird. If you choose to use this feature, your email address search terms are sent to Gandi.net and Mailfence to return available addresses. In addition, your country location is also shared to provide the correct prices. You can learn more about Gandi.net’s and Mailfence’s data practices by reading their privacy notices.

    Always good to read TOS and PP of an service.

      • @[email protected]
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        -12 hours ago

        The Vivaldi browser has an inbuild Mail client, which share nothing to third parties. Vivaldi is complete independent from third party investors and share nothing with other companies.

  • NONE
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    23 hours ago

    Great! I’m very happy with Thunderbird and with all this Mozilla nonsense i was worry that I had to leave it.

  • @warmaster
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    105 hours ago

    lol, what a shitshow. A product from the same company is distancing from the stench. Good on them, but it shows who did some things wrong.

    • Engywuck
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      115 hours ago

      If I remember correctly, Thunderbird isn’t a Mozilla product anymore but it’s maintained by the community. Mozilla just hosts it.

  • CrisOP
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    156 hours ago

    Wasn’t sure if there were better places to post this, feel free to cross-post if you know other fitting communities :)

  • @[email protected]
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    4 hours ago

    I understand why people are so mad at Firefox/mozilla but honestly? I just don’t know of any viable alternative right now. Chrome, Safari, edge, etc are all categorically worse offerings because of their parent companies/policies.

    Can someone please give me a non-chromium, Mobile and browser desktop suggestion? Firefox has so many QoL things I depend on. I need something that can use major extensions and such.

    Edit: iOS is the real issue here for me

    • @[email protected]
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      93 hours ago

      Mozilla’s new TOU only covers pre built Firefox executables, not the source code.

      Librewolf and Waterfox are good forks that would not be bound to the TOU.

        • @[email protected]
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          33 hours ago

          You’re welcome. I’ve been covering this issue since it’s been announced. There are a number of accounts who are either deliberately spreading misinformation or who have a very poor understanding of how software licenses work.

          Anyone who tells you that these terms are normal for a locally run browser is making the posts in bad faith.

          • @[email protected]
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            23 hours ago

            Thanks for further explaining.

            I’ve been super frustrated by lemmy posting vague info then going to watch some Linux and selfhosting YouTubers for them to only explain or gossip the issue for 20 minutes without alternatives.

            So far trying librefox.

            • @[email protected]
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              13 hours ago

              Librewolf btw.

              I’ve personally moved to Waterfox and very much enjoying the experience, with a few hiccups.

          • @[email protected]
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            42 hours ago

            Ok… I have a Linux machine too. But I need apple devices for my work as well. I’m asking for solutions not “ditch your phone and computer for different ones.”

        • @[email protected]
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          23 hours ago

          There may be Mac specific browsers that might be a better fit. I don’t use a Mac personally but could be worth going through the App store to see what is out there.

    • @[email protected]
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      4 hours ago

      Librewolf is a fork of Firefox.

      From their site:

      LibreWolf also aims to remove all the telemetry, data collection and annoyances, as well as disabling anti-freedom features like DRM.

      In the future, Ladybird or a browser built on top of Servo might be alternatives, but both projects are pretty far from being usable right now.

      • @[email protected]
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        4 hours ago

        Appreciate the suggestion but iOS. Silly of me to forget that in the initial comment

    • @VerseAndVermin
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      13 hours ago

      I am trying Floorp as of yesterday. I like Zen Browser, but their github contributers list makes it look like it’s mostly the effort of one person and that always gives me pause until somethings been around a while. Floorp seemed more spread out so I decided to try it despite its silly name.

      I’m interested in how ladybird shapes up.

      Worth noting that you may have DRM issues on some forks with video content. I don’t think you will on Linux, and someone clear this if you can, but I think the alternate used can’t do 4k video? I’m not a big web media consumer so idk. Has something to do with Widevine I think.

  • Palladiumasteroid
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    25 hours ago

    Good to know that they’ll be training AI on its users only on their browser. What a relief /s

    Thunderbird’s been isolated and isolated itself from wider Mozilla from sometime, so this doesn’t surprise me. It belongs to a different subsidiary and everyday it becomes more separated from other Mozilla products. It’s just there.