That's actually very boilerplate and tame compared to what Lemmy actually does with your data...
LWD
BTW, this Magic Lasso is an ad blocker for Safari.
Between this, and Magic Lasso quoting themselves, this blog post is really hard to take seriously
Hey, it's been a few weeks. Guess whether Mozilla has updated their privacy policy yet!
It's very clear what they say on their corporate website, right?
Set up a new email on Gmail or Proton Mail
Two words. They could have removed two words and made the instructions infinitely better.
And this is on the web page where, if you tap on it three times, it instantly exits out and goes to DuckDuckGo. Which is pretty neat.
And the blame for Mozilla's lack of transparency rests entirely on Mozilla's shoulders.
If you know anything about Mozilla's finances at all, you know that they always are one to two years out of date. So your response, which I've seen before, is ignorant at best, and really disingenuous at worst. I hope for the former.
I don't think you have to worry too much about Mozilla running out of money. Right now, they're spending it like there's no tomorrow.
CEO salary: Mitchell Baker's salary jumped by millions of dollars while Firefox browser market share slumped.
Shopping spree: Mozilla purchased two brand new AdTech corporations in the last year or so:
- One of them serves up ads through Firefox on shopping websites and sells your browsing/location history.
- The other works with corporations like TikTok (and at least two more of the top 10 most popular social networks) to analyze their traffic.
Throwing cash around: If wasn't enough, Mozilla has earmarked $30 million for AI research grants, and another $30 million for random venture capital.
So in general, even if you could to donate directly to the development of Firefox, I think Mozilla should get its financial house in order before you do. (But you cannot donate to the development of Firefox, which is another reason you might want to consider withholding any donations.)
I like this post and the style of writing, but there's no way on earth this is "easy" to the average, non-technically-minded person. Never mind trying to convince the average Boomer or Gen X-er to follow these steps, it might exhaust a lot of privacy advocates or other people in technical fields. Heck, I've seen technically proficient people complain about the complexities of getting Matrix/Element encryption to work, and by comparison, that's practically a walk in the park.
(I was originally going to make a slightly more conciliatory comment, but then I realized you were not the OP of the original content. I appreciate the transfer of knowledge to the clearer web.)
$6.9 mil the last time they said. And that was in a year where CEO salary was (on average) cut across all for-profit companies, because even businesses react to market forces sometimes.
Either you die young or you live long enough to turn into the Blink engine.
The fact that the United States intentionally makes these zones really subverts the conspiracy theory that the government is using 5G to control our minds (or whatever the theorists say these days).
My thought's exactly. It doesn't look perfect, but it's the first time anybody is seeing this on a nightly release. I've had my issues with Firefox, but they're really cooking right now.
There are a few good points in that response and a few I don't. They also concede a couple points, and complain about somebody who reposted that article (but not the original author I linked, thankfully).
To address your question: For example, sure, maybe Google does cache data but...