02-26-2025 09:20 AM
For the first time, we’re introducing a Terms of Use for Firefox, alongside an updated Privacy Notice.
Earlier today, we published a blog post explaining why we’re making this change and what it means for you.
Now, we want to hear from you.
We’re committed to engaging with our community and keeping you informed about how we build Firefox—and why we make the decisions we do. Firefox wouldn’t be where it is today without the support of our users, and we want to continue working together to build a better internet for all.
To kick off the discussion, here are a few key points from the blog post:
We’d love to hear your thoughts! Check out the full blog post and share your feedback here. If you have any questions, let us know—we’ll be actively monitoring the discussion and will reply where we can.
02-28-2025 03:35 AM
And even if browser wants to integrate that, they don't need to lie us that such privacy changes are required for that. Chat bot are no different from Google.
Broken trust and deception—that's what's happening.
02-28-2025 02:45 AM - edited 02-28-2025 03:11 AM
these zog forces keeps trying remove every ounce of privacy from our lives and inject as much ads and bugs into our system as possible. whats next? injecting ads into our literal brain waves with a fox bursting into flames and that flame then turns into ads of bill gates saying to eat BUGS?!
02-28-2025 02:52 AM
The only clear part of this situation is that Mozilla has to rewrite ToS and Privacy Policy to be unambiguos, direct and detailed while explaining precisely why the changes are needed and how the data is processed. Any avoidance or further passiveness in this matter will undoubtly result in significant and irrevocable loss of trust and support from the community, which is essential for Firefox to continue operations.
I hope Mozilla can see this is "make it or break it" moment for the future of Firefox and the foundation.
02-28-2025 02:56 AM
Wow, what a phenomenal decision! According to the new license, they’ve apparently granted themselves the right to even sell off your login credentials. So if I type my username and password anywhere, Mozilla can legally pass that information on to the highest bidder! How remarkably convenient - nothing says “privacy” like the right to peddle personal data!
02-28-2025 06:23 AM
Log in is encrypted so they can see them.... I hope.
02-28-2025 08:30 AM
@whyyoudoodisIf you can type it into a browser the browser has the unencrypted value. If the browser can show you on screen the unencrypted content, then the browser has the unencrypted content. Simple as that.
02-28-2025 03:14 AM
An interesting fact is that if you don't log into Google, Chrome collects significantly less personal information than the updated Firefox ToS allows for data collection. If you care about privacy, use an Ungoogled Chrome variant like Thorium. The only reason we ever loved a browser that couldn't even implement web standard APIs from over two years ago and lagged behind Blink in performance—even after creating a whole new language like Rust—was its respect for privacy. Regardless of whether the ToS revision is withdrawn, the fact that a responsible person made such a statement is proof that the Firefox project has already failed.
02-28-2025 03:20 AM
Not wanting to trigger any filters with adequately strong language, that's an impressively "stupid" thing to do. There is little I can add to the discussion other than that I'll now have to burn some time on finding a suitable replacement.
Firefox user since 0.8, 21 yeas and a few weeks it has been.
02-28-2025 03:32 AM
We need privacy. Privacy is enough DEI.
02-28-2025 03:37 AM - edited 02-28-2025 06:22 AM
Couldn't this have waited until Servo was more mature? Please revise and consider changing leadership that is acting against user interest.
Also: how can users opt-out? Oh they can't 🥴
02-28-2025 03:46 AM
Any complaint I have about this has undoubtedly already been said multiple times, but I am just sad Mozilla has decided to shoot themselves in the foot like this. I have recommended Firefox to many of my friends, and have used it on every computer I own, however that stops today unless these changes are reverted. It is simply moronic to assume users who chose Firefox for its privacy benefits will simply accept these changes and move on. For anyone in my situation looking to jump ship, forks like Waterfox & LibreWolf could be an alternative if they do not contain these privacy-disrespecting features, or an independent browser like Palemoon or Ladybird could be more suitable.
02-28-2025 03:59 AM
The path that the people in Mozilla are progressing on, is full of this Diversity, Equality and Inclusivitiy scripting and it's LOOKING like Bolshevick communist surveillance spyware....
Duck Duck Go did the same thing... they transitioned into criminal corporate spyware.
This email spelled out the path your on. AND it's bad.
hello@mozillafoundation.org
Dive into Mozilla’s mission to empower internet users: "you will be surrounded by a global community of people working to make the internet a better, safer, and fairer place for everyone."
Better, Safer and Fairer = are code words for Worse, Controlling and We Yank Your Strings - and you will comply.
02-28-2025 10:04 AM - edited 02-28-2025 10:05 AM
Grow up.
02-28-2025 04:04 AM
If you would allow me to descend from mere distrust into wild dystopian paranoia….
The Terms of Use say this:
You give Mozilla all rights necessary to operate Firefox, including processing data as we describe in the Firefox Privacy Notice, as well as acting on your behalf to help you navigate the internet.
And the FireFox Privacy Notice includes the following:
We may also be required to process your personal data to comply with applicable laws and protection purposes, such as:
Responding to lawful requests and complying with legal processes, such as responding to subpoenas, investigations, or requests from government authorities. Mozilla requires a valid Legal Process to compel the disclosure of Specific User data to a government.
[...]
Identifying, investigating and addressing potential fraudulent activities, or other harmful activities such as illegal activities, cyberattacks or intellectual property infringement (including filing or defending legal claims).
Then under “Lawful Bases” it says:
To comply with applicable laws, and identify and prevent harmful, unauthorized or illegal activity. |
| Compliance with law in responding to data subject rights requests, responding to law enforcement requests, managing and protecting our (and our users) rights, property and/or safety. Legitimate interest, where compliance is not appropriate, in supporting legal or regulatory processes or requests, preventing fraud and managing and protecting our (and our users’) rights, property and/or safety. | Learn more about how we respond to lawful requests. |
"Lawful Requests" appears to include all kinds of requests such as “Wiretap Orders” and “subpoenas”. And Subpoenas don't just happen in criminal cases, they can happen in civil cases as well.
Since Mozilla is getting a “license” to anything we put into our browser, does this mean Mozilla can be compelled to disclose it upon receipt of a legal request or wiretap order?
In fairness, perhaps whether this is part of the privacy policy or not Mozilla would still need to comply with court orders, warrants, etc no matter what. But isn’t our “agreeing” to a “Terms of Use” policy which gives Mozilla ownership of our data and Mozilla implementing features which involve any type of data collection an open invitation to get dragged into an attempt by the FBI to issue a wiretapping order vs some reporter or a lawsuit by a some evil mega-corporation vs some little nonprofit watchdog dot org?
Isn’t the way to avoid this for FireFox not become a “service” which has rights to data people enter into their browsers in the first place and instead remain a piece of standalone open source software which doesn’t send ANYTHING to Mozilla during the course of normal use?
02-28-2025 04:08 AM
The wording of the licence I supposedly grant to you is extremely bad. I get what you're trying to say (I hope!), but the manufacturer of a hammer does not require me to grant them a licence to hit a nail I own, nor to explicitly list that I'm not supposed to hit people with that hammer.
Why is this stuff necessary? I can only see one reason: you wish to grant yourself a little more than is actually implied by my use of your tools.
Your terms also state that you can terminate and withdraw anyone's access to Firefox. How exactly is that supposed to work?
You've banned the use of Firefox for watching "graphic depictions of sexuality or violence" (so half of Hollywood movies)? For real?
What this looks like, is that you've made a largely unenforceable, but extremely unpleasant ToS. It has no purpose other than to hurt your reputation, and to maybe allow you to snoop on what I input or upload (you pinky promise not to, just yet, but the Terms essentially make it okay).
What a terrible, terrible development for Firefox and Mozilla.
02-28-2025 04:20 AM
So some C-suite MBAs figure they're going to get rich by creating an ads system and AI training data from users' data. Vultures eating the dessicated remains of Mozilla's abandoned principles.
02-28-2025 04:20 AM
rip firefox
02-28-2025 04:30 AM - edited 02-28-2025 05:08 AM
Go f** yourself, greedy corporate bastards.
I've been loyal Firefox user for 20 years. As a teacher, I recommended The Browser to hundreds of my students. But - no more. Because there is ZERO, ZERO need for "Terms of Service" to use a desktop software. You are idiots for making such a change.
Oh, and my school has about 100 installs of Firefox. Next week, you'll have one hundred less installs.
02-28-2025 06:48 AM
I, too, have about 60 managed installs of Firefox in my school. The students usually use Chrome on their own devices, and Chrome is what they want, but I have consistently refused and championed Firefox to avoid Google's excessive surveillance. Now, what's the point? I might as well rip out all the Firefox installs and install Chrome and have happier users.
I don't think you realize the breadth of what you have accomplished here -- you have annihilated the last and only "selling point" of Firefox. If Mozilla surveils and sells user data, you have nothing. Your USP is now "Google Chrome, but worse".
It's people like us -- the nerds, the sysadmins, the people who are "in the know" about privacy issues -- who have kept you afloat. Your single digit market share is basically us, or because of us. You have now permanently burned those bridges. There is no longer any reason for any of us to recommend Firefox to anyone or install it in our orgs.
02-28-2025 08:20 AM
It's people like us -- the nerds, the sysadmins, the people who are "in the know" about privacy issues -- who have kept you afloat. Your single digit market share is basically us, or because of us. You have now permanently burned those bridges. There is no longer any reason for any of us to recommend Firefox to anyone or install it in our orgs.
This ^
I've installed Firefox on countless devices and was holding it up against Chrome and Edge. Explained to people why it is important to have a free alternative to Chrome and it's forks with questionable privacy. Just so, Mozilla would turn 180° and push a knife in our backs.
Mozilla started to turn in the wrong direction, when they stopped allowing to target my donations to a specific project. My fear was, that Mozilla will spend the money on projects I don't support, so I stopped donating, and my fear came true. Buying advertisement and tracking companies lead to the situation we are in now.
Enough is enough.
02-28-2025 04:41 AM
Does any of this apply to Thunderbird email? They say that they "adhere to the Mozilla Privacy Policy for how we receive, handle, and share information."
Are all my private emails now licensed to Mozilla? Is Mozilla now claiming a license to feed emails from my bank, brokerage, cardiologist, and family to an AI that wants to model advertising to me?
02-28-2025 05:36 AM
No, this TOS is currently Firefox only. - But keep an eye out for changes to Thunderbird's TOS in the next couple of weeks.
02-28-2025 08:35 AM
Mine already are, it seems, because I use a webmail service...
02-28-2025 04:44 AM
Lack of Clarity:
I am frustrated by the vague language surrounding what data Mozilla collects and whether it will be sold. I feel that the updates do not provide clear answers about data usage and sharing practices.
Perceived Shift in Values:
I strongly feel that Mozilla is moving away from its foundational promise of user privacy. I feel betrayed by the removal of explicit statements about not selling personal data, leading to fears that Mozilla may now engage in practices similar to other corporations that monetize user data.
Transparency Issues:
I criticiz Mozilla for not being transparent about the specifics of data sharing. I call for detailed disclosures about what data is collected, how it is used, and with whom it is shared.
Community Backlash:
The community response has been overwhelmingly negative, and I am considering abandoning Firefox in favor of alternatives that prioritize privacy. I feel a sense of disillusionment with Mozilla's direction and a belief that the company is prioritizing profit over user trust.
Concerns Over Corporate Practices:
I am concerned that Mozilla's financial struggles are leading to compromises in its commitment to user privacy. Particularly about the potential for increased data monetization strategies.
02-28-2025 04:53 AM
>Now, we want to hear from you.
You have heard from your users, loud and clear. Now it is up to you to decide whether to respect your users or to throw their feedback in the bin.
And we users have a very good idea what you are going to do.
02-28-2025 04:54 AM
Couple of things come to mind:
02-28-2025 05:07 AM
I think you should have done something different. You have a lot of users who trust you, and you should have trusted those users.
You should have written openly:
"
Due to new EU laws, Mozilla will cease to exist unless it finds another source of funding. We want to make our own advertising service the source of funding. During the next Firefox update, you can agree or refuse to support Firefox.
If you choose "agree to support Firefox", Firefox will run our advertising service. Please read how our advertising service takes care of your anonymity.
If you click "decline to support Firefox", our advertising service will not run.
Please note: there are many services on the Internet that collect your information. Information about you will be collected, but it will not help save Mozilla.
"
02-28-2025 05:21 AM
Yeah, this kind of transparency seems just too obvious.
Do they know know why they are doing what they are doing?? Why would they want us to speculate.
That just leads to speculative doomposting, which is not a good image.
02-28-2025 08:46 AM
This level of transparency and honesty in a popup (and it being clearly opt in, not having support checked in by default) would have been all it took for all of the bad faith Mozilla created in recent years to be resolved. Add a link to: Please Donate, with options for one time or per month/year, and we are talking!
Unfortunately, instead the move was to ruin the already stretched very thin legacy of Firefox 😕 They need to handle it as what it is, not with corporate bs, but a clear "We Messed Up" that honestly owns to the issues. I will not keep my hopes up.
02-28-2025 02:38 PM
And Mozilla could have asked the "decliners" to consider making a donation. I certainly would have donated.
02-28-2025 05:15 AM
I have been a Mozilla fan for a while, and as such often been a apologist for decisions made. I can not see in the phrasing of this update how the new ToS are anything but concerning.
I am imploring Mozilla to not implement these changes, to keep privacy as a core Tennant, and to not implement manifest V3. Please, you're one of the last gold browsers, don't hurt the good will you have held for so long.
02-28-2025 05:25 AM
Considering that the definition of "Free Software" contains the right to use the software for whatever purpose and your new policy puts quite some limitations on how Firefox can be used, you should modify all documents claiming that Firefox is Free Software as well.
02-28-2025 05:31 AM
I'm so angry I made an account.
I would've been fine with a subscription model, where I pay so that Mozilla keeps its privacy promises.
Instead we got sponsored search engine default - the apparently main business model of Mozilla.
Then we got some sponsored suggestions, pages, and what not. Now, Mozilla simply reserves the right to restrict served (as in: browsed) content and abuse (as in: use for AI training) user content. It doesn't matter if someone at Mozilla says this might be a big misunderstanding and it's only meant for such and such purpose:
Legally, anything that is not explicitly excluded or forbidden - is simply allowed.
I will switch to an open-source fork of Firefox like LibreWolf. The damage in my confidence in the Mozilla foundation has been shattered.
02-28-2025 05:30 AM
I will stop using Firefox as of now. And I will make sure that every person who uses it knows that Firefox has a clear intent to collect user data and sell it to advertisers. I will write blog posts, I will create pull requests, I will promote free branches and forks.
I loved Firefox and it is really sad that the software which was a role model for most of other free and opensource projects becomes the thing it was fighting from the very beginning
02-28-2025 05:33 AM
I've been using Firefox for years now and even recommended it to people
this is the final straw
either fix your vauge and unethical sneaky tos update or I'm done....the two reasons I use Firefox are manifest v2 and privacy.... those two are non negotiable
02-28-2025 05:39 AM
What you wrote violates new ToS 😉
02-28-2025 05:40 AM
Either telling the truth is wrong.
Or the CEO of Mozilla and her Zionist controllers are wrong.
Take your pick.
02-28-2025 05:43 AM
👎
02-28-2025 06:12 AM
Look like its time to pull out , was a good ride but goodbye
02-28-2025 06:14 AM
Here is what I think of your decision--hi ho, hi ho, its off to another browser I go.