I thought it was open source.
https://github.com/signalapp/Signal-Server
This doesn't prevent them from running different software or logging requests, but we have unsealed court orders, which is better than most other services that could receive them.
I see the problem: [anything] after the website domain is redirected to profile/[anything]. Imagine running that redirect repeatedly. It will keep on adding "profile" to the beginning. To stop it, you have to make sure the URL after the domain doesn't start with "profile", otherwise you're in danger of a loop.
According to who and where? You just chronologically ordered things backwards from the Wikipedia article!
The Wikipedia article and the quote don't mention it being forked from anything. And the word has a strict code definition so if it was, it wouldn't be hard to prove...
imagine if talking to the people around you required you calling a central phone depot first before being connected to the person next to you
Meanwhile, our Lemmy conversation is just like that, except instead of one central telephone provider, there are at least two (yours and mine). The risk surface has doubled!
Can you provide a citation for a claim that it is a fork?
If you're against being petty, lead by example and don't tone police!
about:about
This might be the wrong place to ask, but does anybody know when Mozilla is obligated to put out their 2023 tax forms? It's almost 2025 and I'm not an accountant
I'm skeptical of all cryptocurrency, but in regards to this:
It's a centralized coin, antithetical to federation.... Just like signal.
What is wrong with centralization when a core principle of Signal is privacy? Federation often complicates and confounds efforts to make things more private - look no further than Matrix's Olm implementation. MegOlm also encrypts far less metadata, by design and probably out of necessity.
The real question is to shortwavesurfer: Is it actually a Monero fork, or are they just saying the word "Monero" because it's always on their mind?
Because I've seen zero evidence of the former (after wasting my time looking), but plenty of the latter. Thus, not worth taking seriously.
I can't take any statements from you about Monero seriously: https://lemm.ee/comment/15410085
This is the most important thing I know about it, from an article that was first published in 2021, and last seen earlier this year.
Signal Founder May Have Been More Than a Tech Adviser to MobileCoin
Signal recently launched a beta integration of MobileCoin (MOB) for payments. Its price has jumped from $7 to over $55 in the past month, giving it a market cap of $13.75 billion.
Signal founder Moxie Marlinspike, whom MobileCoin previously described as a technical adviser, may have been more deeply involved in the cryptocurrency project.
An earlier, nearly identical white paper found online, which MobileCoin CEO Joshua Goldbard called "erroneous," lists Marlinspike as the project's original CTO.
Hopefully, this rebrand turns things around, as we need organizations like this to survive. Otherwise, we will be left with the greedy Big Tech ones, who aren't really concerned with people or their rights.
Suggested Read 📖
Mozilla Boots Staff Yet Again, Advocacy Unit Shut Down
Subtle shade detected.
That's an interesting detail!
I'm not surprised this tagging system is imperfect, but in a broader context -- that a company like Google probably has something a hundred times more powerful and more accurate, and it's scanning through people's whole photo libraries, really adds to their creepy factor.
Well, was the picture at least taken on a Xiaomi? Or is the AI hallucinating metadata now too
I always assumed anybody on a Firefox subreddit was cut from a different cloth 😉 Especially because Firefox on the desktop offers first-class bookmark management IMO.
I know I use it a ton, anyway.
You see the Bookmarks menu item without scrolling down in the menu? Most of the time (read: when I'm not on the Home overlay) I need to scroll down to reveal the rest of the menu.
Is this the same menu that makes viewing and adding bookmarks one step more tedious than they used to be?
To add a bookmark:
- Tap menu
- Tap Save
- Tap Add to Bookmarks
To view bookmark (from anywhere but the Home overlay):
- Tap menu
- Scroll down
- Tap controls
There's a Reading List but I've never used it.
As long as bookmarks work as a to-do list, why not, right? Especially because you don't even have to use folders: "todo" as a tag works just as well.
Oh, so it was just empty virtue signaling and hypocrisy? You're welcome.
This is the second layoff at Mozilla this year, the first affecting dozens of staff on the side of the organization that builds the popular Firefox browser.
Context
Senate Bill (SB) 1047 is legislation proposed by Senator Scott Wiener for regulating AI models that cost over $100 million to train. The bill was designed to hold AI companies accountable for potential damages caused by their models.
It gained widespread support from the population of California and a broad coalition of labor unions, AI safety advocates, Hollywood figures, and current and ex-employees of AI megacorporations.
However, many giant corporations including Google, Amazon, Meta, and OpenAI opposed the bill, asking Gavin Newsom to veto it.
Mozilla's statement
On August 29, Mozilla joined the corporations to endorse a veto, publishing its own statement:
>Mozilla is a champion for both openness and trustworthiness in AI, and we are deeply >concerned that SB 1047 would imperil both of those objectives. For over 25 years, Mozilla has >fought Big Tech to make the Internet better, creating an open source browser that challenged >incumbents and raised the bar on privacy, security, and functionality for everyone in line with our manifesto. > >Today, we see parallels to the early Internet in the AI ecosystem, which has also become >increasingly closed and consolidated in the hands of a few large, tech companies. >We are concerned that SB 1047 would further this trend, harming the open-source community and >making AI less safe — not more. > >Mozilla has engaged with Senator Wiener's team on the legislation; we appreciate the Senator’s >collaboration, along with many of the positive changes made throughout the legislative process. >However, we continue to be concerned about key provisions likely to have serious >repercussions. For instance, provisions like those that grant the Board of Frontier Models >oversight of computing thresholds without statutory requirements for updating thresholds as AI proves safe will likely harm the open-source AI community and the startups, small businesses, >researchers, and academic communities that utilize open-source AI. > >As the bill heads to the Governor’s desk, we ask that Governor Newsom consider the serious >harm this bill may do to the open source ecosystem and pursue alternatives that address >concrete AI risks to ensure a better AI future for all.
Source: Mozilla (PDF).
Gavin Newsom vetoed this bill on September 29th.
After announcing that it would accept cryptocurrency donations last week, the Mozilla Foundation has put them on hold following critical comments.
Mozilla recently removed every version of uBlock Origin Lite from their add-on store except for the oldest version.
Mozilla says a manual review flagged these issues:
> Consent, specifically Nonexistent: For add-ons that collect or transmit user data, the user must be informed... > > Your add-on contains minified, concatenated or otherwise machine-generated code. You need to provide the original sources...
uBlock Origin's developer gorhill refutes this with linked evidence.
> Contrary to what these emails suggest, the source code files highlighted in the email: > > * Have nothing to do with data collection, there is no such thing anywhere in uBOL > * There is no minified code in uBOL, and certainly none in the supposed faulty files
Even for people who did not prefer this add-on, the removal could have a chilling effect on uBlock Origin itself.
> Incidentally, all the files reported as having issues are exactly the same files being used in uBO for years, and have been used in uBOL as well for over a year with no modification. Given this, it's worrisome what could happen to uBO in the future.
And gorhill notes uBO Lite had a purpose on Firefox, especially on mobile devices:
> [T]here were people who preferred the Lite approach of uBOL, which was designed from the ground up to be an efficient suspendable extension, thus a good match for Firefox for Android.
New releases of uBO Lite do not have a Firefox extension; the last version of this coincides with gorhill's message. The Firefox addon page for uBO Lite is also gone.
With just a few days’ notice, Mozilla terminated my employment this month after leaving me hanging on leave without explanation for several months. My discrimination case against them therefore enters a new phase after this wrongful termination. https://mastodon.social/@stevetex/112780506720122370
sigh
Investors included entrepreneur Gary Vaynerchuk and Mozilla Ventures.
Gary Vee is a notorious grifter NFT salesman with a checkered past.
Webacy is a cryptocurrency wallet "technology layer" that "provides security features" like password backup, "digital wills", etc.
This session is facilitated by Emily Martinez, Ben Lerchin Show on schedule About this session Come interact with the first iteration of Queer AI, a conversational chatbot trained on queer literature. The bot currently engages in a variety of conversations around intimacy and relationships, but we...
On Valentine's Day 2024, Mozilla came out with a piece critical of AI chatbots titled "Creepy.exe: Mozilla Urges Public to Swipe Left on Romantic AI Chatbots Due to Major Privacy Red Flags."
But before they found red flags, back in 2019, Mozilla promoted a workshop on a creepy, rainbow-washed, chatbot ecosystem where people identified as "queer" were required to bare their most intimate sexual thoughts.
From the post:
> your... interactions will be recorded... you will occasionally be prompted with random survey questions
What kinds of questions did they randomly ask the people who would "queer the AI"? Creepy stuff like
> Have you ever sexted with a stranger? > Have you ever sexted with a machine? > Do you remember the first time you were aroused by language? > Do you think an artificial intelligence could help fulfill some of these... needs?
The workshop providers guided people into establishing an intimate, sexual connection with the chatbot they could create.
> How might we build trust with an AI? > How might we give it its own sense of desire?
Even the consenting participants in the workshop complained about the AI's creep factor:
> it feels like the A.I. is gas-lighting you. > Seems like a noncommittal sexting bot. It should at least be clear about what it’s trying to do.
The startup that Mozilla fostered for this panel ended up crashing and burning, but its creepier, worse brethren live on inside of Firefox 130, displayed as first-class options within Mozilla's chatbot options. I just thought it would be fun to take a trip down memory lane to see how many creepy red flags AI companies could get within Mozilla's view without ever concerning them.
Now that Google and Microsoft each consume more power than some fairly big countries, maybe it's time for 2024 Mozilla to take heed of 2021 Mozilla's warnings.
There seems to be minimal information about this online, so I'm leaving this here so cooler heads can prevail in discussion.
Link to filing: https://archive.org/details/jyjfub
Notable portions:
Teixeira was hired as Chief Product Officer and was in line to become CEO.
> Mr. Teixeira became Chief Product Officer (“CPO”) of Mozilla in August, 2022. During the hiring process, Mr. Teixeira had conversations with executive recruiting firm, Russell Reynolds Associates, that one of Mozilla Corporation’s hiring criteria for the CPO role was an executive that could succeed Mitchell Baker as CEO. > > Also, shortly after being hired, Mr. Teixeira had conversations with Ms. Baker about being positioned as her successor.
After taking medical leave to deal with cancer, Mozilla swiftly moved to replace CEO Mitchell Baker with someone else.
> Shortly before Mr. Teixeira returned from leave, Mozilla board member Laura Chambers was appointed Interim CEO of Mozilla and Ms. Baker was removed as CEO and became Executive Chair of the Board of Directors.
After returning, Teixeira was ordered to lay off 50 preselected employees, and he objected due to Mozilla not needing to cut them and their disproportionate minority status.
> In a meeting with Human Resources Business Partner Joni Cassidy, Mr. Teixeira discussed his concern that people from groups underrepresented in technology, like female leaders and persons of color, were disproportionately impacted by the layoff. > >... Ms. Chehak verbally reprimanded Mr. Teixeira, accusing him of violating [a] non-existent “onboarding plan” and threatening to place Mr. Teixeira back on medical leave if he did not execute the layoffs as instructed.
Mozilla's lack of inclusivity was a known problem
>In February 2022, Mozilla commissioned the firm of Tiangay Kemokai Law, P.C. to assess its performance in providing a diverse, equitable, and inclusive workplace culture. > > The report delivered in 2023 from Tiangay Kemokai Law, P.C. states in part: “MoCo falls into the Cultural Incapacity category based on leadership’s inadequate response to the needs of a diverse culture or else the need to create a more diverse, equitable, and inclusive culture, which is reflected in current systems, processes and procedures, policies and practices, or the lack thereof, and are incongruent with MoCo’s stated values and goals.”
Steve Teixeira has been put on leave.
> On May 23, 2024, Mozilla placed Mr. Teixeira on administrative leave. > > Mr. Teixeira requested a reason for being placed on administrative leave. > >Mozilla did not provide Mr. Teixeira with a reason why he was placed on administrative leave. > >Mozilla cut off Mr. Teixeira’s access to email, Slack messaging, and other Mozilla systems. > >Mozilla instructed employees not to communicate with Mr. Teixeira about work-related matters. > >Upon information and belief, an investigation into Mr. Teixeira’s allegations was finally conducted in late May 2024, but Mozilla did not do so under its internal policies and procedures regarding managing complaints of discrimination. Mr. Teixeira was not contacted to participate in the investigation into his complaint of unlawful treatment.
Coverage online so far
I say "alleged" because there appears to be no consensus on the veracity of this document.
Update: this appears to be confirmed.
This has received no "news" coverage besides one angry loudmouth (Bryan Lunduke) whose entire commentary career has been shaped by his political beliefs, regardless of truth.
I recently downloaded Firefox Nightly and noticed some new settings that were enabled by default:
> * Suggestions from Firefox Nightly Get suggestions from the web related to your search > * Suggestions from sponsors Support Firefox Nightly with occasional sponsored suggestions > > Learn more about Firefox Suggest
The link in the UI doesn't mention sponsorships anywhere. But this page does:
> Who are Mozilla’s partners for sponsored suggestions? > >We partner with organizations to serve up some of these suggestion types... For sponsored results, we primarily work with adMarketplace, while also providing non-sponsored results from Wikipedia.
This page links to the adMarketplace Privacy Policy which makes it pretty clear this company is okay with collecting your IP address and passing it to further unnamed entities.
Elsewhere, they say Firefox sends them "the number of times Firefox suggests or displays specific content and your clicks on that content, as well as basic data about your interactions with Firefox Suggest", and then will share interaction information "in an aggregate manner with our partners".
-----------------
Update: Switched the link from the Desktop to the Mobile version. Added more quotes from FF, and bolded info about their one named AdTech partner.
A recent article from the Economic Policy Institute notes that CEO pay slumped slightly in 2022:
> CEO pay is linked strongly to the stock market—and market declines in 2022 led to an uncharacteristic dip in CEO pay... > > CEOs are getting paid more because of their leverage over corporate boards, not because of contributions they make to their firms.
Another site calculated the average decrease:
> [I]n 2022, CEO pay decreased 7.3% and 2.7% for the overall Russell 3000® and S&P 500® indices, respectively
And yet, the Mozilla CEO pay has risen from $5,591,406 in 2021 to $6,903,089 in 2022. That's a 23.5% increase.
Kenya has some reservations about Worldcoin.
Today, when I navigated to amazon\.com on Firefox for Android, I received a jarring message that I could "try" a new service, Fakespot, on the app.
Fakespot is littered with privacy issues.
Among other things, FakeSpot/Mozilla was forced to admit: "We sell and share your personal information"
Fakespot's privacy policy allows them to store and/or sell:
- Your email address
- Your IP address
- "Protected chacteristics" ie gender, sexuality, race...
- Data scraped from across the web
- Account IDs
- Things you bought (This is sold to advertisers)
- Things you considered buying (This is sold to advertisers)
- Your precise location (This is sold to advertisers)
- Inferences about you (This is sold to advertisers)
Right before Mozilla acquired them, Fakespot updated their privacy policy to allow transfer of private data to any company that acquired them. (Previous Privacy Policy here. Search "merge" in both.)
People donate to Mozilla because they believe in the company's stated goals. Why were the donations put into an acquisition of a company with this kind of privacy policy? And why has Mozilla focused on bundling it as bloat into their browser? Now that Brave is in hot water for becoming bloated, Mozilla should buck the trend, not follow it.
Today, when I navigated to amazon.com on Firefox for Android, I received a jarring message [https://i.imgur.com/fp2pigl.png] that I could “try” a new service, Fakespot, on the app. What’s Fakespot? A review-checking, scammer-spotting service Fakespot for Firefox [https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2023...
Today, when I navigated to amazon\.com on Firefox for Android, I received a jarring message that I could "try" a new service, Fakespot, on the app.
What's Fakespot? A "review-checking, scammer-spotting service for Firefox."
Among other things, FakeSpot/Mozilla was forced to admit: "We sell and share your personal information"
Fakespot's privacy policy allows them to collect and sell:
- Your email address
- Your IP address
- Account IDs
- A list of things you purchased and considered purchasing
- Your precise location (which will be sent to advertising partners)
- Data about you publicly available on the web
- Your curated profile (which will also be sent to advertising providers)
Right before Mozilla acquired them, Fakespot updated their privacy policy to allow transfer of private data to any company that acquired them. (Previous Privacy Policy here. Search "merge" in both.)
Who asked for this? Who demanded integration into Firefox, since it was already a (relatively unpopular) browser extension people could have used instead?