![]() ![]() In recent years, Mozilla has been positioning itself as one of the champions for Internet freedom, and I assume that some of their people were that all along (e.g., the kind who could've gone to Google, but chose to work for much less money at Mozilla). In parallel, Google paying Mozilla for placement, and then possibly to keep a nominal competitor alive. Initially, there was competition to be the most popular browser.īut most of the history is a constant movement towards having the browser facilitate what companies wanted to do towards users (moving away from the "user agent" as an agent of the user). For Mozilla, that's a fairly recent positioning that they're growing into. I boggled over this particular obvious problem for years.īut I don't recall Firefox ever being hardcore security and privacy (even though some of their techies are).
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