- cross-posted to:
- opensource@lemmy.ml
- foss@beehaw.org
- opensource@programming.dev
- cross-posted to:
- opensource@lemmy.ml
- foss@beehaw.org
- opensource@programming.dev
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/26407305
Thought this was interesting and worth knowing about
It should be pretty clear from this that people do not understand the need for a company that makes a browser to have a ToS. If Thunderbird is made by the same company but doesn’t have a ToS but has more valuable information in it (it’s an email client) then clearly Mozilla isn’t doing the shady things that people are saying they are. If they were they would have started with the gold mine of emails which are a better source of user data than any browser related data. But they didn’t.
It doesn’t work like that. Many people believe that the ToS was added to make Mozilla legally able to train AIs on the collected data. Using emails would be more efficient but also much more shady which Mozilla doesn’t want because their products are inferior in everything except for privacy claims already.
“Don’t attribute to malice what is easily explained by incompetence”
So yea Mozilla wrote some terms that where ambiguous and could be interpreted in different ways, and ‘many people believed’ that they did this intentionally and had the worst intentions possible by their interpretation of the new ToS
Then Mozilla rewrote that ToS after seeing how people were interpreting the original ToS:
https://www.theverge.com/news/622080/mozilla-revising-firefox-terms-of-use-data
And yea, now ‘many people will believe’ that ‘Mozilla revised their decision to do this after the backslash’ - OR, it was never their intention and now phrased it better after the confusion
People just want to get their pitchforks out and start drama at any possible opportunity without evidence of wrongdoing… Mozilla added stupid stuff to the ToS, ok yea fair enough - but if they actually did “steal user data” - this would be very easily detectable with Wireshark or something