Mozilla, please. The wording of things in the terms of use document is not the main problem. The exact legal interpretations given to them does not make much difference. That you suddenly feel the need to impose on your remaining users a "terms of use" agreement at the same time as you stop promising not to sell user data is not conducive to retaining your credibility.
The whole ToS is the problem. It violates the first rule of FOSS: The freedom to run the program as you wish, for any purpose (freedom 0).
The fact that they are dragging their feet proves that they intend to keep it to sell something or use that data (hint: that would be perfect to train a LLM or sell specialized ads). And they’ll do it over and over until we are too tired to ask.
Firefox does not need a ToS because it’s a tool. Sync or Pocket maybe, but not Firefox.
The article points out that the legal definition of what a sale is didn't match how they were using it. They didn't stop promising to not sell user data.
The problem isn't what the TOU says, it's the fact that there's a TOU at all. The browser isn't a service that needs terms, it's an application that shouldn't have any.
There are in fact a ton of services that browsers interface with on behalf of a user. Always have been. For example, Firefox uses the Google Safe Browsing service to protect against phishing. They use location services to fulfill the Geolocation API. They call DNS servers to find the website you want, etc, etc.
Applications do have terms, they're called EULA's. It's the same idea. Also nothing new, I've been clicking through that shit since the year 2000.
There are in fact a ton of services that browsers interface with on behalf of a user. Always have been. For example, Firefox uses the Google Safe Browsing service to protect against phishing. They use location services to fulfill the Geolocation API. They call DNS servers to find the website you want, etc, etc.
Firefox doesn't need a TOU to access those. Those aren't owned or operated by Mozilla. And there hasn't been anything that has been added to Mozilla which would require such a change over the non-terms the application was provided under for twenty years.
Applications do have terms, they're called EULA's. It's the same idea. Also nothing new, I've been clicking through that shit since the year 2000.
Yes, and Firefox had one until 2014. They then replaced it with the MPL2.0, "a free software license, which gives you the right to run the program for any purpose, to study how it works, to give copies to your friends and to modify it to meet your needs better. There is no separate End User License Agreement (EULA)."
You are failing to distinguish between Mozilla and Firefox. Firefox being a standalone application. Firefox performs DNS queries on my behalf. Mozilla doesn't get my DNS queries, they don't need a license for my DNS queries.
Bookmark and password syncing are services, as is pocket. Whether you choose to utilize them is up to you, but they are integrated into the browser as distributed.
Too late, so sad. I already uninstalled Firedung. Falkon is now my default browser.
"Oh, honey, I didn't fuck that wo(man)! And besides, s(he) wasn't interested in me. Please take me back."