Mozilla's massive lapse in judgement causes clash with uBlock Origin developer (www.ghacks.net)
from tifriis@sh.itjust.works to linux@lemmy.ml on 02 Oct 2024 06:09
https://sh.itjust.works/post/26045001

#linux

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vintageballs@feddit.org on 02 Oct 2024 06:21 next collapse

Probably due to automatic extension reviews by Mozilla.

Sad that it happened, but at least it doesn’t impact the actual uBlock, only the lite version for which I honestly see no purpose in Firefox anyways.

Virkkunen@fedia.io on 02 Oct 2024 06:52 next collapse

It was a manual review conducted by an actual person that in the end admitted they were wrong

vintageballs@feddit.org on 02 Oct 2024 07:35 next collapse

Oh okay, not a good look.

obinice@lemmy.world on 02 Oct 2024 09:31 next collapse

Are you like, those old multi colour swirly rubber balls we used to get out of 20p machines as kids? Those were ill!

vintageballs@feddit.org on 02 Oct 2024 13:29 next collapse

I don’t understand what you are telling me

boatswain@infosec.pub on 02 Oct 2024 14:06 next collapse

It’s a reference to your username

vintageballs@feddit.org on 02 Oct 2024 14:40 collapse

Ahhh

GreyEyedGhost@lemmy.ca on 03 Oct 2024 02:26 collapse

And he just leaves them hanging.

I’m referring to the users asking the questions.

obinice@lemmy.world on 03 Oct 2024 05:51 collapse

To be fair it’s been less than a day, one of the great things about internet messaging is how asynchronous it can be, it’s great for calming anxieties about needing to come up with a reply immediately like if you’re on the phone or something x.x

You’re right though, I don’t reply to things often enough, partly because I’m very sick with COVID at the moment but also a lot of it is my social anxiety and fear of rejection.

I get so scared of what people might say that I avoid looking at the replies, even when I initially reach out because I want to interact with people and form connections ><

It’s one of my big problems that I need to overcome, I’m still working out how to tackle it, but I do know it’s a problem, and it’s mine to solve.

Alas I can’t afford things like therapy, so I just have to stumble around trying to figure my ADHD, possibly autistic (wish I could get seen for a diagnosis…), anxious, dumb ass brain out 😅

I’m sorry in the mean time for being a bit annoying, I don’t mean to be on purpose :-)

GreyEyedGhost@lemmy.ca on 03 Oct 2024 16:52 collapse

I’m not the best guy to ask for sensitive responses, but try to take my blunt and possibly obnoxious response in a positive light.

There are a lot of people saying terrible things on the internet, to the point where only the more aggregious ones stand out. Most things will be ignored or forgotten by most people, whether they were good or bad, but I appreciated this post, and you for putting it out there.

I was trying to make a lewdly suggestive comment about vintage balls leaving them hanging. Apparently it wasn’t done very well, but it did have unintended and appreciated consequences.

obinice@lemmy.world on 04 Oct 2024 10:45 collapse

Ahh, old hanging balls, gotchya xD

Yeah the medium of text can be tricky to convey meaning sometimes, I’m a pretty sarcastic person (gotta love using humour to cope with every situation, so healthy…) with a very deadpan kinda delivery on a lot of it, so I often find myself wondering if my intent came across well over text. Tricky indeed.

Anyway you’re cool, and thanks for taking the time to reply so thoughtfully :-)

Now, I’m going to go back to being drenched in a cold sweat! It seems that’s today’s COVID symptom roulette wheel choice! 💦☉_☉💦

obinice@lemmy.world on 03 Oct 2024 05:53 collapse

Your username vintage balls reminded me of those little rubber balls we used to get at kids, I don’t see them any more (maybe they’re seen as too much of a choking hazard now?), so they feel kinda “vintage” to me now haha.

Those things could really bounce! I liked the semi translucent ones with the rainbow swirl patterns.

[deleted] on 02 Oct 2024 15:25 collapse

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Buddahriffic@lemmy.world on 02 Oct 2024 20:27 collapse

Agreed. Especially considering uBlock origin is pretty much the main reason to use FF at all. They shouldn’t be delegating reviews of it to someone who would fuck up this badly.

Assuming this wasn’t a “test the waters” kind of thing to determine just how much they were reliant on ublock.

I’ve been using the main FF build for a while now but I’m wondering if I should start looking at the various fork options.

limitedduck@awful.systems on 02 Oct 2024 14:12 next collapse

Where does it say it was a manual review?

NotSteve_@lemmy.ca on 02 Oct 2024 15:31 collapse

In the original post on GitHub it’s mentioned that it was a manual review

abbenm@lemmy.ml on 02 Oct 2024 15:24 collapse

It was a manual review conducted by an actual person that in the end admitted they were wrong

Good to know! I wasn’t sure if it was automated or not. That’s rough.

0x0@programming.dev on 02 Oct 2024 08:08 next collapse

I honestly see no purpose in

It’s to circumvent ManifestV3.

obinice@lemmy.world on 02 Oct 2024 09:30 next collapse

I thought that was the shit Chrome was doing to block adblockers and antimalware plugins, if Firefox is doing the same thing what browser do we use now? :-(

I don’t care about all the browser wars stuff, I lost interest when it was Netscape Vs IE, I just want a browser that I can configure fully myself and have it be as safe and secure as one can make it, within reason.

pmk@lemmy.sdf.org on 02 Oct 2024 10:18 next collapse

If we want to do something radically different, there’s always gopher and gemini browsers.

ilinamorato@lemmy.world on 02 Oct 2024 10:48 next collapse

Firefox is not eliminating MV2 extensions. You can stick with Firefox.

abbenm@lemmy.ml on 02 Oct 2024 15:25 collapse

I thought that was the shit Chrome was doing to block adblockers and antimalware plugins, if Firefox is doing the same thing what browser do we use now? :-(

They’re doing a modified version of V3 that they changed to restore ad-blocking functionality.

Neon@lemmy.world on 02 Oct 2024 10:45 collapse

Manifest v2 still works on Firefox, so OP was right, it’s useless

eRac@lemmings.world on 02 Oct 2024 15:40 collapse

The dev stated that it mostly exists for more performance-limited applications like mobile.

Aatube@kbin.melroy.org on 02 Oct 2024 11:22 collapse

Theoretically, the browser executes the Mv3 blocking rules, so it could be optimized and more efficient than js ever could.

MyNameIsRichard@lemmy.ml on 02 Oct 2024 07:01 next collapse

It’s probably a coincidence that shortly after Mozilla acquires an ad company, they “accidentally” remove an ad blocker.

Kusimulkku@lemm.ee on 02 Oct 2024 07:04 next collapse

They made an error and quickly corrected. It’s the addon author who threw a fit and removed the addon.

This just makes me worried to rely on uBO but more because what if the author just fucks off because someone else pissed them off.

mudmaniac@lemmy.world on 02 Oct 2024 07:11 next collapse

It would seem that the ubo lite version was made specifically to cater to chrome and manifest v3 if I’m not mistaken…

In the end the author may have just felt it was too much energy keeping a pared down chrome version on Firefox when the full version is present and working. Especially after this particular drama.

Kusimulkku@lemm.ee on 02 Oct 2024 07:32 collapse

Some say the Lite one was good for mobile since it was lighter weight but I didn’t notice a difference tbh.

mudmaniac@lemmy.world on 02 Oct 2024 10:35 next collapse

Indeed I’m using ubo full on my nothing 2a, and it feels like nothing at all.

reev@sh.itjust.works on 02 Oct 2024 11:53 collapse

Another nothinger! How’s the 2a? Sorry, I know it’s off topic, just curious.

mudmaniac@lemmy.world on 02 Oct 2024 13:59 collapse

Nothingers! Do we get a secret handshake? A mid range phone, that doesnt feel like a mid range phone. My previous phone was Oneplus 6. Nothing 2a feels like how Oneplus 6 felt right at the beginning, at 30% lower a price. I’m loving the face down light only notifications, and the gesture navigation. Gestures means i can use my one thumb to scroll back and forth easily.

Uebercomplicated@lemmy.ml on 02 Oct 2024 12:56 collapse

Performance wise they should be identical, what matters is how many lists you have enabled, etc. If anything, performance-focused list management will result in more performance with ordinary uBO. Either way, gothill is a legend

Edit: I’m wrong, apparently Lite can be faster on android after all

GolfNovemberUniform@lemmy.ml on 02 Oct 2024 07:12 next collapse

I think they had reasons to act how they acted. They’re probably on a lot of pressure because the whole tech world is fighting ad blocking now.

Kusimulkku@lemm.ee on 02 Oct 2024 07:32 collapse

There’s always some reason. I’m just worried that something happens with uBO and same happens there

mudmaniac@lemmy.world on 02 Oct 2024 10:40 collapse

Things always change in the world. Case in point being Lemmy and Federation. Whatever comes after uBO will never be like the same old thing, but we just keep on going forward and fondly remember the nice things we used to have, thanking those that worked tirelessly so we could enjoy those nice things.

GolfNovemberUniform@lemmy.ml on 02 Oct 2024 11:47 collapse

This is a peaceful but not the best approach. Though we should always respect and thank the developers, we (if possible) shouldn’t just let things be replaced with worse alternatives all the time.

mudmaniac@lemmy.world on 02 Oct 2024 14:23 collapse

God grant me the serenity

To accept the things I cannot change;

Courage to change the things I can;

And wisdom to know the difference.

MyNameIsRichard@lemmy.ml on 02 Oct 2024 07:17 next collapse

As the article says, only when it blew up. But you’re right, the author doesn’t look good either.

More honestly, I enjoy a good conspiracy theory with my coffee.

Kusimulkku@lemm.ee on 02 Oct 2024 07:39 collapse

As the article says, only when it blew up.

The article also seems to say that he didn’t bother to disprove the mistaken findings and so Mozilla might’ve not even heard anything back until it blew up. The whole thing seems to have happened pretty quickly.

MyNameIsRichard@lemmy.ml on 02 Oct 2024 10:44 collapse

Yeah, I know. If I was in a sensible mood this AM, I probably wouldn’t have started this chain. But if you look back to my first comment, I did say it was probably a coincidence.

TrickDacy@lemmy.world on 02 Oct 2024 11:46 collapse

…are we pretending your original comment wasn’t sarcastic?

rtxn@lemmy.world on 02 Oct 2024 07:18 next collapse

Mozilla can’t be trusted to host the addon, so the author is taking on the responsibility of hosting it himself. How is that his fault and not Mozilla’s?

Whether Mozilla acted out of malice or incompetence is irrelevant. The report was false and the findings were incorrect, they have to be held responsible either way.

Kusimulkku@lemm.ee on 02 Oct 2024 07:34 next collapse

Mozilla did apologize, said they were wrong and said they’d correct the issue. The author refused and decided not to put it back to AMO. At that points its on the author that it’s not AMO.

rtxn@lemmy.world on 02 Oct 2024 07:55 collapse

Promises from a for-profit company don’t mean shit. How many times have you seen the “we’ve heard you and we’ll do better next time” routine, only for next time to be the same or worse? They’d promise you the pissing Sun if it meant more dollar signs.

They’re empty words. No company will put out a statement saying “we fucked up, we’re sorry, it’s going to happen again”. Until Mozilla can prove through actions that the issue is fixed, Hill is correct in distrusting them.

Kusimulkku@lemm.ee on 02 Oct 2024 08:08 collapse

This is such a storm in a teacup. Someone making the manual checks at Mozilla fucked up and the situation was quickly admitted. I don’t know what else to wish, other than that the failure wouldn’t have happened in the first place. Sucks that it did. Now what sucks is that gorhill doesn’t want to do put it back but it is what it is, luckily it was just the Lite version.

While I like a juicy conspiracy and fuck the sytsems and all, I don’t think they were lying when they said they saw that they’d put the addon back if gorhill just resubmitted it.

PonyOfWar@pawb.social on 02 Oct 2024 08:13 next collapse

I’d much rather have them be overzealous and mistakenly block an addon for a few hours, than have them be too lax and approve addons actually stealing data.

FooBarrington@lemmy.world on 02 Oct 2024 11:14 collapse

They also removed all previous versions except a very old one with known issues, thus exposing people to more danger than necessary in any way.

[deleted] on 02 Oct 2024 15:29 collapse

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digdilem@lemmy.ml on 02 Oct 2024 09:31 next collapse

This just makes me worried to rely on uBO but more because what if the author just fucks off because someone else pissed them off.

That is very concerning to me, also.

Large parts of the internet relying on one or two tiny one-man FOSS projects? (UBO and ADguard are often cited as the only two reliable-ish and safe adblockers)

If he can’t be bothered with that nonsense, how secure is UBO’s future? How secure is the future of adblocking?

I would bet that advertising companies are rubbing their hands now and planning to ramp up pressure against these poor devs.

[deleted] on 02 Oct 2024 09:42 next collapse

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Kusimulkku@lemm.ee on 02 Oct 2024 09:46 collapse

I don’t think throwing a fit and it being a hissy fit are the same thing.

abbenm@lemmy.ml on 02 Oct 2024 15:28 collapse

I don’t think throwing a fit and it being a hissy fit are the same thing.

the things people will debate online

edit: I beefed it on this one. They were being normal and I misunderstood. Note to self to think before typing in the future.

Kusimulkku@lemm.ee on 02 Oct 2024 16:30 collapse

Throwing a fit can mean getting angry. It being a hissy fit would mean the cause was something childish and not serious.

I’m not trying to debate it, if you look I’m the one who originally wrote the comment so I’m trying to explain what I meant.

Uebercomplicated@lemmy.ml on 02 Oct 2024 13:04 next collapse

Lite is barely relevant for Firefox anyway. Gorhill (along with host list maintainers) is one of the saints of modern day open source; if he felt overwhelmed by Mozilla’s actions, and chose to just take Lite down from the extension store, he has every right to. No one should shit on someone who has given so much to the community.

logging_strict@lemmy.ml on 02 Oct 2024 15:34 collapse

then someone with much more talent can step up, rename the plugin, and carry on.

The challenge is choosing the next maintainer user handle.

github.com/…/sphinx-external-toc-strict

Kusimulkku@lemm.ee on 02 Oct 2024 16:44 collapse

That is the power of open source, but gorhill is a very respected and uncompromising maintainer so can be hard to find someone as good

abbenm@lemmy.ml on 02 Oct 2024 15:27 collapse

It’s probably a coincidence that shortly after Mozilla acquires an ad company, they “accidentally” remove an ad blocker.

I mean I’m of two minds here. One, there’s an epidemic of intellectually lazy, kneejerk Mozilla hate and it’s time to turn the tide on that.

But on the other hand, even as a Mozilla fanboy I can see how this is a really bad look, and really indefensible. I think it’s more of a huge error of judgment, and if there are other huge errors, I can begin to see a problem, but I think they have too much of a positive track record in their history to just go reaching for the tinfoil hats so quickly.

Xiisadaddy@lemmygrad.ml on 02 Oct 2024 10:18 next collapse

That poor dev is just getting so much shit thrown their way constantly having a short temper about it makes sense. They are fighting against an entire industry to make the internet usable for people. I hope everyone who has the means to donates to support the ~~developer. ~~

Edit: donate to block list maintainers thanks to lemmyvore below for the correction

lemmyvore@feddit.nl on 02 Oct 2024 11:03 collapse

The dev has not made available any means to donate to him directly. He asks that people donate to the maintainers of the block lists instead.

Xiisadaddy@lemmygrad.ml on 02 Oct 2024 12:11 collapse

thank you i updated my comment

slazer2au@lemmy.world on 02 Oct 2024 10:31 next collapse

Oh so ublock origin lite. A manifest V3 compatible adblocker for chromium browsers.
The original ublock origin is unaffected

abbenm@lemmy.ml on 02 Oct 2024 15:23 next collapse

Firefox will be adopting Manifest V3, but a modded version that enables ad blocking.

turkalino@lemmy.yachts on 02 Oct 2024 20:12 next collapse

But they’re also not ditching v2, correct?

abbenm@lemmy.ml on 02 Oct 2024 21:23 next collapse

I’m honestly not sure.

signofzeta@lemmygrad.ml on 03 Oct 2024 13:34 collapse

Firefox implemented Manifest V3, but there are no plans to remove V2.

newbeni@lemmy.world on 03 Oct 2024 05:20 collapse

Wait, I’m confused. How are Mozilla and Firefox different? I thought what ever Mozilla decides goes…granted, I’m out of the loop.

abbenm@lemmy.ml on 05 Oct 2024 14:37 collapse

I was using them interchangeably. I guess one is understood to be kind of a general foundation or overall company, whereas Firefox is just the browser itself

signofzeta@lemmygrad.ml on 03 Oct 2024 13:35 collapse

Just curious, how does uBlock Origin Lite compare to regular uBlock Origin? I’ve heard from the Chrome crowd that it’s not as good as blocking ads due to the V3 limitations, but how’s the speed? I might consider it for lower-end hardware if it’s not too compromised.

kbal@fedia.io on 02 Oct 2024 12:34 next collapse

The discourse about Mozilla is ridiculous, here and most everywhere. You've got people taking every perceived opportunity to attack them for things they do, things they didn't do, and things it's imagined they might've done. And then another crowd of equally determined people doggedly defending them for every idiotic blunder they make, such as this one.

Meanwhile Mozilla itself has nothing substantial to say. This is not the first time a prominent extension has mysteriously gone missing from amo with Mozilla telling us nothing about its role in the incident. @mozilla needs to be in the discussion giving us a real explanation of what happened, why they got it wrong, and what they're doing to improve things.

isVeryLoud@lemmy.ca on 02 Oct 2024 13:09 next collapse

Correct, this two-sided discourse is due to a massive lack of communication on Mozilla’s part, leaving room for speculation.

abbenm@lemmy.ml on 02 Oct 2024 15:21 next collapse

The best I can think of is that the explainer language used to justify the extension’s removal was just boilerplate language that got copy+pasted here because someone clicked the wrong button. But even that makes a mockery of the review process.

I think “oops clicked wrong button” would be slightly more defensible, but not by much. If they truly rejected the extension for content in it that it does not have, it’s hard to see how a human could make that mistake even accidentally. But maybe there’s something I’m missing.

blurg@lemmy.world on 02 Oct 2024 21:58 collapse

True in a way. However, there is a rather large collection of speculation on the Internet that is quite an undertaking to correct. And a large population of people and bots willing to speculate. Also, having once been speculated, each speculation takes on a life of its own. If it gets much more substantial, forget Skynet, we’re busy creating Specunet and its sidekick Confusionet – an insidious duo.

isVeryLoud@lemmy.ca on 02 Oct 2024 22:50 collapse

Gotta love circular reporting.

featured@lemmygrad.ml on 02 Oct 2024 14:09 next collapse

Mozilla.social no longer exists, Mozilla took it down

brianary@startrek.website on 03 Oct 2024 01:16 collapse

Yep, which further highlights the problem: @mozilla@mozilla.social 🔗 mozilla.social/users/…/113153943609185249

We’ve made the hard decision to end our experiment with Mozilla.social and will shut down the Mastodon instance on December 17, 2024. Thank you for being part of the Mozilla.social community and providing feedback during our closed beta. You can continue to use Mozilla.social until December 17. Before that date, you can download your data here (mozilla.social/settings/export), and migrate your account to another instance following these instructions (support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/mozilla-social-faq). 

brianary@startrek.website on 03 Oct 2024 02:52 collapse

19½ months. That’s how long Mozilla was prepared to listen to a small, unfiltered subset of their users, for a laughably meager maintenance cost.

jol@discuss.tchncs.de on 02 Oct 2024 16:04 collapse

We have collectively agreed that Mozilla is a) not reviewing extentions enough, and b) reviewing too much.

mindbleach@sh.itjust.works on 02 Oct 2024 13:08 next collapse

There’s a dozen Firefox extensions that really matter, at any given time. Mozilla has never appeared to give a particular shit about any of them. Paying special attention based on popularity wouldn’t be ideal, but for fuck’s sake, their passive-aggressive treatment keeps burning out the developers who fuel their ecosystem, and it would take vanishingly little effort to shield their keystone plugins.

If their active neglect had ruined both uBlock and DownThemAll - I’m not sure I’d be using Firefox anymore, and I’ve been using Firefox since before it was called Firefox. Why the fuck would anyone normal even consider it?

BigDanishGuy@sh.itjust.works on 02 Oct 2024 15:01 collapse

DownThemAll is one of those extensions which get installed immediately for me. If I didn’t have DownThemAll and uBlock origin, I’d might as well just use edge smh

mindbleach@sh.itjust.works on 02 Oct 2024 15:06 next collapse

And the author spent a year hassling Mozilla about how killing XUL plugins would make his wildly popular plugin nearly impossible. Did they move one iota to help that? Nope. Did they adopt DTA functionality natively, like they’d absorbed Pocket? Did they fuck. Their mantra for two straight decades has been “just rewrite!” and they cannot imagine why they kept hemorrhaging devs and plugins and users once Chrome slimed its way into everyone’s options.

logging_strict@lemmy.ml on 02 Oct 2024 15:51 next collapse

my votes are for nusensor, popupblocker, dark reader, nuke anything

delirious_owl@discuss.online on 02 Oct 2024 18:02 collapse

This guy p0rns

BigDanishGuy@sh.itjust.works on 02 Oct 2024 20:43 collapse

No, I’m married, I don’t do offline pron

UnfortunateShort@lemmy.world on 02 Oct 2024 15:40 next collapse

Agreed. This is more likely someone fucking up and not having a second pair of eyes look at the presumed problem than anything else.

logging_strict@lemmy.ml on 02 Oct 2024 15:49 next collapse

then someone with much more talent can step up, rename the plugin, and carry on.

The challenge is choosing the next maintainer user handle.

github.com/…/sphinx-external-toc-strict

Good choice?

data1701d@startrek.website on 02 Oct 2024 16:07 next collapse

I almost had a panic attack until I realized this was for UBlock Origin Lite rather than the normal, manifest v2 version. Still mad at Mozilla,though.

jol@discuss.tchncs.de on 02 Oct 2024 16:08 next collapse

Gorhill is free to do whatever he wants, of course, I thank him for all the good work. But his reaction is honestly childish and dangerous for the community. Once again his decision to pull the plug opens the door to abusers. Now when you go to the addons page and search for uBlock, you may find illegitimate extensions pretending to be uBlock which are trying to collect your data or worse. Less tech say people don’t know any better.

boredsquirrel@slrpnk.net on 02 Oct 2024 20:46 next collapse

I dont get why you would run that on Firefox. Users will find the corrent one, all good.

Btw is the uBlock without Origin addon still there?

Findmysec@infosec.pub on 02 Oct 2024 23:05 next collapse

This one is completely on Mozilla. TBH I’m not very happy with their governance either. Stop spending money on bullshit and start working on the damn browser. Stop hassling devs like him who have had an immense contribution to not only open source, but your fucking browser’s usage metrics.

I wish another browser standard comes up and we can say goodbye to this google-infested shit-bucket that is mozilla.

Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee on 02 Oct 2024 23:11 next collapse

Ok, but “google-infested shit-buckets” are also Chrome and all the chromium poop cups, even more so one might say.

Not disagreeing, especially with the sad sentiment of what’s happening at Mozilla, just trying to keep in mind the other 95% of the browser picture.

Findmysec@infosec.pub on 02 Oct 2024 23:13 collapse

Which is why I’d like to see a third player. I don’t use Chrome except for ungoogled chromium when the other browsers are tied up

Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee on 02 Oct 2024 23:49 collapse

Yes, as said, Im agreeing, I was just pointing out the sad reality of what the majority is doing (and like it or not, that affects us all).
I’d love a legit third choice (again)!

Findmysec@infosec.pub on 03 Oct 2024 14:01 collapse

Yeah

wuphysics87@lemmy.ml on 03 Oct 2024 02:56 collapse

Not to disagree but mozilla and firefox are not the same thing

semperverus@lemmy.world on 03 Oct 2024 06:05 next collapse

Thats kind of like saying Valve and Steam are not the same thing. Like, yea, Valve owns and develops Steam, but most people will understand someone who calls the company “Steam” (even if they sound a bit daft in doing so).

Findmysec@infosec.pub on 03 Oct 2024 14:04 collapse

The funny part is I did mean Mozilla

Findmysec@infosec.pub on 03 Oct 2024 14:04 collapse

I didn’t say they were. For the most part, if a third option really comes up, I’m OK with Mozilla not existing at all.

Lets_Eat_Grandma@lemm.ee on 03 Oct 2024 02:37 next collapse

Mozilla isn’t google. They took it back and encouraged the guy to reach out in the future if any issues arise.

BFD, it’s not like they banned his account, just one gimped extension that doesn’t do the whole ad blocking experience and even then only because he didn’t do anything to try and reverse it. Then after it’s restored he throws his tantrum and removes it.

With all the extensions out there false positive detections of malicious apps are going to happen. Nobody has unlimited resources to hire boatloads of devs to review every single line of code of every extension for every update done. That’s an insane expectation.

skeezix@lemmy.world on 03 Oct 2024 02:45 collapse

Is it me or is mozilla kinda turning into a cunt lately

scifun@lemmy.world on 03 Oct 2024 05:06 next collapse

It’s you.

semperverus@lemmy.world on 03 Oct 2024 06:02 collapse

There is fairly substantial rumor that there may be a smear campaign against firefox lately because they are still supporting manifest v2, which our owning class does not care for.

Mozilla has made their fair share of stupid decisions lately, but they are still leagues ahead of Google, Amazon, and the other FAANG-type companies in ethics and trustworthiness. Definitely something to keep a pulse on, but nothing to throw the baby out with the bathwater over. And if it really bothers you, use LibreWolf/Fennec.

buzz86us@lemmy.world on 03 Oct 2024 06:37 collapse

I really hope Librewolf will keep on if Mozilla enshittifies

brianary@startrek.website on 03 Oct 2024 02:54 next collapse

As I’ve said elsewhere: I wonder what controls Mozilla has in place to prevent gradual takeover of their board by those with an interest in removing Firefox as a competitor. We’ve watched the sleeper cell in the Supreme Court transform that body into an illegitimate partisan puppet. Mozilla’s actions over the last few years would make much more sense if it were being manipulated into self destruction.

fish@feddit.uk on 03 Oct 2024 13:26 collapse

That’s a real bummer about Mozilla and uBlock Origin clashing. It’s weird 'cause their values seem pretty aligned with privacy and user control. Hopefully they can smooth things out soon—users like us just want our browsing to be smooth and ad-free!

beefbot@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 04 Oct 2024 06:53 collapse

“Seem” : had been, were previously. Now, Mozilla’s values seem no longer reliably aligned with privacy and user control

yikerman@lemmy.world on 04 Oct 2024 09:11 collapse

I think it’s just Mozilla has a messy moderation. Don’t overreact.

beefbot@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 04 Oct 2024 14:46 collapse

I reacted accurately. Mozilla blog today: “ Improving online advertising through product and infrastructure” 🤑