06-21-2024
11:55 AM
- last edited on
10-18-2024
02:19 PM
by
Jon
Hi folks,
In the next few days, we will start the Nightly experiment which provides easy access to AI services from the sidebar. This functionality is entirely optional, and it’s there to see if it’s a helpful addition to Firefox. It is not built into any core functionality and needs to be turned on by you to see it.
If you want to try the experiment, activate it via Nightly Settings > Firefox Labs (please see full instructions here).
We’d love to hear your feedback once you try out the feature, and we’re open to all your ideas and thoughts, whether it’s small tweaks to the current experience or big, creative suggestions that could boost your productivity and make accessing your favorite tools and services in Firefox even easier.
Thanks so much for helping us improve Firefox!
02-08-2025 03:51 PM
Where is deepseek r1, qwen 2.5max etc
02-09-2025 05:02 AM
Not sure if it's worth it, you really seem to have made your choice, but let's do it anyway.
Would it be okay to add an optional feature that allows the user to easily access websites selling guns? I mean, this is optional and disabled by default, so the people that don't wanna see guns won't. I think you wouldn't do it, because guns probably don't fit in your values.
An other thing that is supposed to not fit in your values is disrespecting privacy. And guess what: generative AI does that. They train their AIs using data of people that weren't asked if they wanted to. This is atrociously against privacy. And you are associating yourself with that.
The fact I'm not the first one explaining that and the disrespect your have to us in your answer to Frisk make me think you understand the problem and just don't care? At this point, I don't think even removing this feature, fixing that other privacy option that is enabled by default and apologizing publicly would fix the trust you lost from us. But if privacy is still one of the values of Mozilla, that's what you would do anyway.
Hoping there will still be people fighting for our privacy like Mozilla used to do.
02-09-2025 08:32 AM - edited 02-09-2025 08:33 AM
Sorry to say you are wasting your time. This is how Mozilla is monetizing going forward and they simply don't care what we think.
There are enough people who don't care or worse think AI in its current wasteful state is a great idea that they drown out those of us who know better.
I had a short conversation with some of their staff when I cancelled my donations after this announcement and they were clear it was just the way it was going to be.
02-09-2025 09:13 AM
So 'feedback' is somewhat of a misnomer.
You might be right. Reading what is said at the head of the thread more closely "...we’re open to all your ideas and thoughts, whether it’s small tweaks to the current experience or big, creative suggestions that could boost your productivity and make accessing your favorite tools and services in Firefox even easier" doesn't imply any reflection on backward steps even if they are to correct what users see as a misstep.
I hope we are wrong.
02-09-2025 09:21 AM
I really do too, but I'm not waiting around to see if an organization pivoting to focus on money instead of principals is going to do the right thing.
History shows they never go back.
02-09-2025 05:50 AM - edited 02-09-2025 05:50 AM
02-09-2025 09:47 PM
I didn't think the Firefox logo was meant to represent the company's commitment to contributing to the devastating effects of global warming on the planet. This sucks. Firefox is the only browser I use for a reason--it's because I expect you to not do this kind of thing.
02-09-2025 10:57 PM
No. Remove AI from Firefox.
02-10-2025 10:13 AM
I think you'll find few Firefox users who want this. I personally think this should be removed with an apology for being completely tone-deaf to why users use this application.
02-10-2025 01:43 PM
Please keep the planet-burning plagiarism engine out of Firefox. It is dumb garbage that sucks and NOBODY WANTS THIS TRASH.
02-10-2025 02:31 PM
1. I don't want this on by default
2. This is dangerous to enable by default for people using Firefox in regulated industries, such as healthcare.
3. Mapping this to ctrl + x for mac users is a terrible idea, as thats a frequent typo for people who use OSX part time, and windows or linux as well.