The main question is what behavior is being introduced. I haven't researched deeply, but apparently the add-on does nothing until the user opts-in on studies.
The main question is what behavior is being introduced. I haven't researched deeply, but apparently the add-on does nothing until the user opts-in on studies.
Some of the comments are mentioning IT managers banning firefox, those will be the same IT managers doing all the other pennywise/pound foolish things that make you try not to work on their team in the first place.
Maybe it’s actually good to put something scary sounding in there to raise awareness. It could help people understand that scary phrases are not the most common sign of foul play. When the real hackers come for you, they usually dont look scary at all.
Firefox is bleeding market share and has been for a while. Despite this, revenue and profit is at an all time high for mozilla which is weird as the revenue comes from sending theirs users to google for being profiled and exposed to ads. Meanwhile long time users lose faith and trust in mozilla and firefox.
Not exactly the best time to be caught having "a little fun" move showing that they will sneakily install stuff in your browser without asking.
Then again mozilla is "making far-reaching and very short-sighted decisions in a vacuum."[1]
[1]:http://forums-test.mozillazine.org/viewtopic.php?p=14736466#...
Chrome 54.98%
Safari 14.79%
UC Browser 7.98%
Firefox 6.09%
Internet Explorer 3.88%
Opera 3.79%
In all fairness, Firefox has overtaken IE.