10-03-2024 09:35 AM - edited 10-03-2024 09:36 AM
Let’s talk about advertising—more specifically, how Mozilla should participate in it while staying true to our core values.
Earlier today, Mozilla President Mark Surman published a blog post on the topic. And Mozilla CEO Laura Chambers also shared her thoughts.
We want to hear your thoughts too.
We are committed to doing a better job engaging with our community and keeping you informed of the work we’re doing and why we believe in it. Mozilla wouldn’t be where we are today without the support of our community members, and we want to continue working together to build a better internet for all. That’s what we hope to use this space for.
To kick off the discussion, here are a few important points from the blog posts:
Please check out the above blog posts and share your feedback here. Or if you have any questions, let us know. We’ll be actively monitoring the discussion and plan to share our takeaways in a follow-up post.
10-13-2024 01:56 PM
Thanks for starting a conversation about this. Honestly I don't mind having ads and sometimes even appreciate them. What I don't like is when my web experience is cluttered and poorly designed because of those ads. This is actually the primary reason I stopped using Chrome last year and switched to back Firefox after so many years without it. I use an Android device as my primary computer and was fed up with basically every single web experience feeling like a claustrophobic and trashy experience. I didn't want to read blog posts anymore, I didn't want to find recipes anymore, I didn't want to browse wiki articles about my favorite games. Literally everything was unenjoyable and I had pushed through it for years and got fed up!
Switching to Firefox has been a dream though!! I actually enjoy browsing the web again, and I never thought I would. There's nothing cluttering up the experience and getting in the way of what I want to enjoy. 😌 Thank you! All I ask is that if you're going to get into advertising that you figure out a really polished and premium way of doing it that so far I haven't seen on the web. What does that mean? Idk but it's an interesting design experiment to refine isn't it? If you can do this, I'm totally up for supporting Mozilla through an evolution like this. ✌🏼
10-17-2024 07:25 PM
It really seems like you guys are just trying to do things that are inherently sort of anti-privacy (targeted advertising, AI integration) and then claiming that you're committed to doing them in a privacy-focused way, which is a bit like saying you're going to shoot yourself in the foot safely.
I get that it's tempting to stray from your core values when it'd be much more profitable to just give in and do what everyone else is doing. I don't think it's going to work out for you.
10-21-2024 05:41 PM
Hey all,
We’ve been reading your responses on how Mozilla can approach advertising while staying true to our core values of privacy and user control. The feedback we’ve received after sharing our perspectives has been honest, passionate, and incredibly helpful. So, let’s break down a few key takeaways and where we’re headed next:
Keep sharing your thoughts, and helping make Firefox better.
10-21-2024 06:28 PM - edited 10-21-2024 06:40 PM
I'm going to structure this reply in bullet point form with each point responding directly to the corresponding point in your comment.
10-22-2024 09:43 AM
LOL, the word "passionate" is a fav corpo expression for "we really wish we could do this without you guys getting mad at us." Interesting that you're actually sort of addressing this anger while completely ignoring the avalanche of rage about AI features, though.
Anyway: you've said nothing here. All you've done is restated the same vague information in a different way in hopes that it looks like you care, and you clearly don't.
10-22-2024 10:04 AM
I don't think anyone who has addressed criticisms feels heard. As others have said, this is just a restatement of the original post. If I am wrong, I would love to hear concrete changes that are going to be made. Here are a couple suggestions:
Collecting extra data should not be enabled by default. If you want to collect the data, show the user a notice and allow them to choose whether they want to send extra telemetry to advertisers, the same way Brave does. Or, if you must make it "opt out," then show a notice the same way Google does.
The setting is also unclear and hard to understand. People may believe that disabling it could harm their privacy, when it is clear to people who have dug into your documentation that this is not the case. You should rename the option to something like "Send Data to Advertisers" or "Send Telemetry to Advertisers" and put promises regarding Mozilla's responsibility under that.
10-23-2024 05:45 AM
I repeat, I don't want any ads, it's actually very simple and doesn't require much effort. All you need is the built-in Adguard extension. Adguard is an open-source ad blocker, which is easier to use than ublock origin, and it can be more convenient to feedback when you find that there are ads that have not been blocked, and it can be processed quickly, so I recommend Adguard. As long as you have this ad filter, you can salvage your reputation, which is equivalent to declaring war on advertisers. I recommend that you work with Adguard to optimize performance when you build Adguard.
11-02-2024 02:42 AM
I wish you'd treat us like adults and be clear about why you're doing this. Google holds the purse-strings. Are you trying to establish a non-Google revenue stream? Are you trying to appease them by crippling adblocking on FF? Why are you pushing pro-ad anything?
The linked blog posts are deeply disingenuous. Patreon and co have established that directly handing over money is how we support one another on the internet in a sane manner. Nobody alive wants to look at ads.
If you're seeking financial independence from Google, please just say so and launch Firefox Pro. There will be handwringing but I for one would gladly pay 20€/mo for a quality browser that isn't user-hostile. Use fair regional pricing and don't put any of the critical stuff behind the paywall. This is the only honest way to operate - ask (loudly) for cash from your users for the value you add. Extracting value from us via en****tification just makes everything worse for everyone. (Mozilla might also need to learn to run leaner without Google's money, but that's not necessarily a bad thing.)
The fact that you won't be clear makes me think it's option two, Google attaching strings to the cheque.
If you continue down this path and dry up all the goodwill, what's the endgame? Another undifferentiated Chrome clone in all but engine? Google gets the lion's share of the userbase (the non-tech-savvy), and the rest of us go to a fork? Is that what you want?
Your entire moat is being anti-ad (thanks to gorhill). What on earth are you doing?
...
On second thought, if you alienate enough of us, the open source forks will get more contributors. Maybe this is for the best.
11-02-2024 03:16 AM
This is an interesting read. I unfortunately don't understand enough about company structuring, looking up public financing etc to do more up-to-date research myself. I happen to be in favour of the spending on lefty political objectives, but wow does this look like people with too much money looking for stuff to spend it on.
The C-suite compensation is the existential issue. It sounds like a Wikipedia situation, where the C-suite ends up wanting to protect their hilariously disproportionate paychecks - at the cost of long-term sustainability or sane ethics.