Mozilla Foundation Launches Mozilla Corporation 270
An anonymous reader writes "MozillaZine is reporting that the Mozilla Foundation has created a commercial subsidiary to continue development of Mozilla Firefox and Mozilla Thunderbird. Don't let the word "commercial" scare you, the new Mozilla Corporation (as it has been dubbed) will be owned 100% by the Mozilla Foundation. The change is mostly a legal/tax thing to avoid the problems of pursuing revenue-generating avenues while remaining a non-profit. There will be no change to the development process and end-users won't notice much difference either. See also the Mozilla Foundation press release about the Mozilla Corporation and the Mozilla reorganization FAQ."
So. (Score:3, Funny)
Would you really invest in such a corporation? How can a dinosaur be trusted to manage a corporation, when it can't even keep its own pets safe??
Re:So. (Score:2)
Re:So. (Score:2)
I
Re:So. (Score:2)
Re:So. (Score:2)
Strange business plan (Score:3, Funny)
Hmm... This is unusual.
1. Fix this legal/tax thing
2. Avoid the problems of pursuing revenue-generating avenues
3. ???
4. non-profit!
Re:Strange business plan (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Strange business plan (Score:3, Funny)
Wait a second (Score:2)
How can these, for the lack of a better term, Hackers be expecting to make a buck off free software??
Naah, I don't believe in this. I'm with you Mr. Gates.
Except... (Score:3, Funny)
That's what I've been saying for years! =(
-Bill GatesSmall groups (Score:2)
I've always believed that small teams work better and more efficiently, so it sounds a pretty smart move IMO. Hopefully efficient development will lead to better development and and even better browser.
__Laugh daily new video clips [laughdaily.com]
Something doesn't make sense (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Something doesn't make sense (Score:2)
"(1) the folks at Mozilla want to start getting rich, and/or
I had the same thinking. And I am scared by both options (2 more than 1). Ok, maybe they can run Mozilla as a private company (option 1), but something must change for that.(2) they want to attract private investment
Re:Something doesn't make sense (Score:2)
Re:Something doesn't make sense (Score:2)
Re:Something doesn't make sense (Score:2)
Mozilla Co. = Services Organization (Score:2)
Well, Mozilla Corporation (MC) will sell one thing: programming services that tailors Mozilla Foundation's software for the customer. Suppose that a corporate client wants a version of Firefox to uses a special type (e.g., 256-bit ?)of encryption. Then, the programmers at MC modify Firefox's code to incorporate that encryption. The corporate client d
Re:Mozilla Co. = Services Organization (Score:2)
Re:Something doesn't make sense (Score:2)
Re:Something doesn't make sense (Score:2)
Re:Something doesn't make sense (Score:2)
Re:Something doesn't make sense (Score:2)
Re:Something doesn't make sense (Score:4, Interesting)
The issue with non-profits in the US is not about accruing "private profits" but about the type of activities pursued for the non-profit's "public benefit purpose". "Acting as if" we were a for-profit entity is a problem, even if we never accrued private profits and never distributed them somehow to the owners (in this case, the Mozilla Foundation is the sole owner).
So even if we act to further our public-benefit purpose, and distribute funds as grants, or otherwise avoid profit-taking, if our action in the market and with partners resembles for-profit commercial activity, we may lose our non-profit status. That is something the Foundation does not want to risk.
This is the main reason for the reorganization.
Yes, it means Firefox is making money, and in ways that may put us in the position of "acting as if" we are a for-profit commercial entity.
No, we will not start charging for Firefox or any of our other free (beer and speech) products.
Re:Something doesn't make sense (Score:2)
The only thing this would jeopardize is your status as a charitable nonprofit, donations to which are tax deductible. You could still be a nonprofit corporation even if you were no longer a charitable organization.
Re:Something doesn't make sense (Score:2)
Re:It's Counterproductive to have a Corporation (Score:2)
They could even under a nonprofit corporation. Depending on whether they can justify the business as directly relating to the mission of the nonprofit, they may or may not have to pay taxes on the income. As a for-profit, they would pay the taxes for sure.
That would be a conundrum. But if there's a corporation, it is much less messy because they can just hang on to the money while MozFoundati
Re:Something doesn't make sense (Score:2)
The Google Connection (Score:4, Interesting)
I think we will be seeing some more serious collaboration between Mozilla and Google now.
Re:The Google Connection (Score:2)
I think we will be seeing some more serious collaboration between Mozilla and Google now.
What kind of collaboration would this change enable? Seems to me there's nothing stopping them collaborating now.
Re:The Google Connection (Score:3, Informative)
According to Mitchell Baker [mozillazine.org]--MoFo's Chief Lizard Wrangler and the new MoCo's President--the Foundation already generates revenue through "search relationships". No prizes for guessing who she's talking about.
Re:The Google Connection (Score:2)
That's almost scary. (Score:2)
How long until we start seeing little icons saying "this site only works with Google Firefox"?
Re:That's almost scary. (Score:2)
How long until we start seeing little icons saying "this site only works with Google Firefox"?
With IE still having close to 90% market share, can anyone really afford to try such a thing? I don't think even Google could.
deviantART? (Score:5, Interesting)
The lesson of deviantART is that once the corporation starts pursuing profits, and this becomes more important than the community, the origins of the foundation and the original purpose and driving force of the community may become lost.
Re:deviantART? (Score:2)
=)
"To promote choice and innovation..." (Score:3, Interesting)
Sometimes I could almost wish one of these press releases would say our aim is to make the Internet a shittier place for everyone and to gouge the public so deep that their children's children will still be paying off the debt. I wouldn't approve, but at least it would reduce the entropy of the data stream.
It's not that I suspect the Mozilla corp of anything untoward, and short of omitting it entirely, I can't think of a better way to to say what they appear to be saying.
All the same, it's a bit semantically null, innit? Where's the point of a FAQ if you fill it with meaningless platitudes?
Re:"To promote choice and innovation..." (Score:2)
It reads as such:
Re:"To promote choice and innovation..." (Score:2)
Re:"To promote choice and innovation..." (Score:2)
I always think of is as the the more predictable the signal, the less info. Of course, that is how physics entropy works, with the value maximising as the energy of every atom tends toward the same value.
And I do remember that the two are opposites, because Maxwell's Demon "works" by turning one sort into the other.
So yeah, looks like you're both right. I stand corrected. Thank you.
Positive and negative. (Score:2, Interesting)
One might also wonder how everyone who has contributed to Mozilla's development because it was a project they believed in will feel. A lot of people have contributed to Mozilla through the years, and now Mozilla is going to profit?
In the
Re:Positive and negative. (Score:2)
Anti-Corporate Extension (Score:2, Funny)
Thank God for the awesome power and flexibility of extensions.
Will this help (Score:4, Interesting)
Don't take this as a flame, I've used Netscape Messenger/Thunderbird since around 1997, but I am starting to have way to many problems... I've seen bug reports about this for several years now, yet no fix gets released. (Thunderbird hardly gets any new releases compared to Firefox)
My programming skills are minimal otherwise I would try myself to fix it...
Anyone know of another email client? (mainly for windows, Eudora, Pegasus, and Outlook) are either not options or I do not like them.
I like Thunderbird... It's a shame that it's such a task to use with this problem...
Re:Will this help (Score:2)
I take it the "Copies & Folders" section isn't sending your sent items to the desired folders, or bcc'ing the right folks?
email clients (Score:2)
My wife just tried Thunderbird. It imported email from 3 accounts in the Mozilla suite. It mixed up all the mail between accounts. I switched to Fedora this spring, which uses Evolution for email and I like it just fine. There is a Windows port of Evolution [sourceforge.net] in the works, but there is no firm timeframe for release yet. I see that it sent it's first message recently.
Re:Will this help (Score:2)
haven't tried opera 8 yet though (still using 7.x)
ps. if you ever think about switching, do! apples Mail is wonderful. not the fastest but it works oh so nicely
Re:Will this help (Score:2)
Re:Will this help (Score:2)
If you're on windows, then you can probably run it in Cygwin - I haven't tried that, but I doubt there'll be much problems.
Re:Will this help (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Will this help (Score:2)
Re:Will this help (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Will this help (Score:2)
Be sure to check bugzilla.mozilla.org to see if the issue that you're experiencing is a known issue -- and write up a bug if not.
You can also try running one of the nightly builds (see, for example, The Rumbling Edge [mozillazine.org]) to see if that gives you a better experience. Nightlies are untested and may have even worse bugs, of course.
Becky (Score:2)
It can copy sent mails to the Sent folder and has many other nice features.
http://www.rimarts.co.jp/becky.htm [rimarts.co.jp]
Doesn't change much (Score:2)
In the long run, this will probably be 100% transparent to everyone besides Mozilla, the IRS, and some of their business partners. It shouldn't affect their product at all.
Re:Doesn't change much (Score:2)
Put On Some Slacks (Score:2)
Re:Put On Some Slacks (Score:2)
There are never and mod points around when you need them.
Playing With The People's Trust (Score:2)
Re:Playing With The People's Trust (Score:2)
Mozzilla Corporation shareholders? i.e. the Mozilla Foundation (Sole Shareholders).
Non-shareholders? Who cares? No-one took any notice when I complained about (Insert company I have no shares in) doing (Insert action I disagrtee with).
The only spin they need is "We are following the desires of our shareholder. "
Uhm, what about all the contributors that don't get paid one dime for their work?
Re:Playing With The People's Trust (Score:2)
What about them?
Seriously, they donated thier work. What's the problem?
Well they might be pissed off. It doesn't mean that Mozilla will be legally liable or anything but hey, as far as I know Mozilla stands on the shoulders of it's contributors. Without those contributors they will be hurting.
Re:Playing With The People's Trust (Score:2)
Re:Playing With The People's Trust (Score:2)
It seems to me that other FOSS projects even more successful than Mozilla haven't resorted to this. Of course, those projects used a license better than the MPL, so go figure.
It also seems to me that any amount of money that the corporation can persue or recieve can equally well be done through the foundation so long as the money was dispersed. In the normal world where every
Re:Playing With The People's Trust (Score:2)
Then you came along and seemed to respond to something entirely different.
Re:Playing With The People's Trust (Score:2)
The main premise is that the reasons given for pimping out Mozilla into a corporate shell are not clear compared to the stated and assumed needs of the Mozil
Re:Playing With The People's Trust (Score:2)
I said in another comment (which I don't feel like looking up at the moment) that perhaps a reason for incorporation is that Mozilla needs a corporate face for the corporate world. IT geeks are going to (generally) pick what works best for them and they'll have Linux and Apache chugging away somewhere. But Mozilla goes on the desktop. The thought might be that the PHB will look favorably on this softwa
Interesting (Score:2)
What will be most interesting will be seeing if they can resist the instinctive corporate urge to commit gradual financial and PR suicide via the usual scorched-earth tactics. A turn to the Dark Side probably is not inevitable, but given the usual nature of corporations, it probably would not come as a surprise.
No reason for concern at all (Score:2)
Advertising? (Score:2)
Just a thought.
Mozilla has sold out to Google already (Score:3, Informative)
The sellout to Google is quite substantial. We all know about the prefetch for the Google search bar, and how you can disable this in about:config under network.prefetch-next if you don't like collecting cookies from places that you never visit.
What's not commonly known is that this configuration option does not affect the behavior of terms entered in the address bar. If Firefox cannot parse the URL, it will go to Google and pick up the number one site, and then take you there directly. It's like a built-in "I'm feeling lucky."
Convenient? Sure, assuming that a huge percentage of surfers haven't a clue about the difference between search terms entered in a search box, and a URL entered in an address bar. Studies show that this is indeed the case.
Explorer does something similar, in that a search term in the address bar will take you to a search preview, assuming that you don't have Active Scripting disabled. But arguably, this is more benevolent than what Firefox is doing with Google. The way that Firefox is doing it gives Google much more control over web traffic patterns. It makes it much more important to be number one on Google for your selected keywords than it is to be number one on MSN for the same keywords, if everything else is equal.
And it's not like Google's first result is always the best. Recent studies show wide disparity between various engines for the top results.
Moreover, all the several-year-old Google bombs still work. Except one, that is. I made a Google bomb for "out-of-touch executives" that led to Google's corporate executives page. It was doing great in all the engines for the first half of 2004, and even got mentioned in the New York Times in June, 2004. But then Google defused this particular bomb by doing a hand job on their algorithm in July, 2004. It disappeared in Google, and I took my links down. But it was a great bomb nonetheless, and is still doing fine in Yahoo and MSN.
So Google cannot even claim that their mathematical methods are untainted by self-interested sabotage in certain cases. That makes them evil. And with Firefox going along with their game plan, that moves Firefox one step closer to the dark side.
Re:Mozilla has sold out to Google already (Score:2)
> 501(c)(3) tax-exempt public charity status is
> not the ideal vehicle for laundering Google's
> lucre.
I don't know why you'd have a problem with "laundering Google's lucre" when the money goes to develop a great open source web browser and break Microsoft's grip on the web.
> But then Google defused this particular bomb by
> doing a hand job on their algorithm in July,
> 2004.
How exactly do you know it was done by hand? Someone at Google must have
Everyman = google-watch.org. (Score:2, Interesting)
Exactly. You are Daniel Brandt, the guy behind google-watch.org [google-watch-watch.org], and you created GW because your insignificant site which no one linked to wasn't ranked as #1 on Google for searches on people in the U.S. administration.
You were pissed off, and decided to have your revenge. Daniel is your name, Slander and lies against Google is your game.
You basically have no c
Re:Mozilla has sold out to Google already (Score:2)
Link prefetching has been in Mozilla for ages now, and anyone can write a web page to take advantage of it. How, then, would this qualify as "selling out to Google"?
Re:Mozilla has sold out to Google already (Score:2)
Maybe as a corporation they'll update... (Score:2)
It's still on verse 7:15. No mention of the great bird of fire begetting the sacred Fox of flames at all!
I think those cowardly followers of Mammon have some control over publication of the good book. Say it ain't so!
Clear as mud (Score:2)
This is like a zen koan of accounting. The doublespeak that is so familiar to corporate America.
"Uh, yeah Bob, we're gonna have to take our money making discussion off-line because of Sarbanes-Oxley so that we can sort out some of the tax implications of the outstanding revenue from Q3, which we want to preserve for our earnings estimates despite the obvious effects against our
Firefox Pro? (Score:2)
Cons:
3. stricter division of workforce between "mozilla products" that generate revenue, and "mozilla projects" that don't generate revenue, potentially disadvantaging the latter.
I hope this is not true. I'd hate to see a firefox Pro version that you need to buy, and a separate lesser free version of firefox.
Hm... (Score:2)
The End (Score:3, Interesting)
Let me preface my next statement by saying that I love and use firefox exclusivly, but it's time for firefox to fork so it stops fucking up the mozilla foundation.
Re:OB (Score:3, Interesting)
Making money is not a bad thing for such a product. It gives the project insurance against the evils that will be thrown against it--patents, hacks, clones.
My prediction is that firefox will develop more and more commerical-like features: Bundling with certain software, branding for certain services, etc.
IE will likely develop more open-source-like features: listening to user, more standards compliance, more open APIs.)
In most battles, the enemies become more
Re:NEED HELP with new apple product (Score:2)
Post to the correct discussion
Re:Sniff Sniff, Cry Cry..... =*( (Score:2)
Re:I can't quite decide (Score:2)
With a successful IBM (closed-source company moves towards open-source) at one end and a hopefully successful Mozilla Corp. at the other, it shows open-source to be commercially viable whether you open your existing products or develop them that way from scratch.
And, of course, as a 100% open-source corporation it does just that little bit more to bury the "open source as pinko com
Re:I can't quite decide (Score:2)
And do you really think anyone actually believes that Netscape being part of a huge, professional, respected corporation makes their products better than the ones released by a non-profit?
Re:I can't quite decide (Score:2)
Re:I can't quite decide (Score:2)
Both distribute software licensed under the GNU General Public License and other Free licenses. Both abide by the terms of those licenses. Both remain involved in the development of the software they distribute, "giving back" to the software development communities who provide the software in the first place.
Perhaps you were trying to say that being a for-profit corporation is contrary to the ide
Re:I can't quite decide (Score:2)
Not quite. I was trying to say that despite the fact that it's not correct, many people will think that. When it's produced by a "Corporation," people will think Firefox is "just another program" produced by "just another software company." It de-emphasizes the Free Sof
Re:I can't quite decide (Score:2)
Re:I can't quite decide (Score:2)
Re:MHO about possible IPO (Score:2, Insightful)
Also, when money becomes available, like flies to shit, people whose only interest is money immediatly try to get involved and usually succeed.
Re:MHO about possible IPO (Score:2)
Most of us don't rob banks, break into our neighbors' homes, or counterfeit money. And it's not just because we are afraid of the consequences.
But I realize you're also talking about ethical issues rather than illegal problems. But the point is the same. Most people won't do ANYTHING for money... there are a lot of people on Slashdot that wouldn't write viruses, spyware, or send spam. Sure, some of them will. But, thankfully, a l
Re:MHO about possible IPO (Score:3, Informative)
Yipes.
An Initial Public Offering of stock (i.e., an "IPO") is done when there are venture capitalists or owners who want an exit strategy to realize their investment proceeds (i.e., "cash out"). These are traditionally only used by large companies, though, in the "tech boom", small companies were boosted with cash so that they could function like large companies through outside investment. IPOs are very expensive and time-consuming, so they are mostly only used for large businesses.
Another strategy th
Re:MHO about possible IPO (Score:5, Insightful)
If the Mozilla Corporation should go wrong, the Foundation can just re-start to release the official Firefox/Thunderbird versions themselves, including any improvements dome by the Corporation in the mean time. That's the power of Open Source: Even if the corporation gets evil, it cannot suddenly remove the code. The only possible weak point would be the trademark, but I hope the trademark rights remain at the Foundation.
Re:MHO about possible IPO (Score:2, Interesting)
You're distorting the situation. (Score:2)
There is a difference, of course, in the focus. SeaMonkey is a "Project" and Firefox is a "Product". They're both on the Mozilla site, and since Mozilla's focus is Firefox, SeaMonkey is rightfully less important (Ignoring the reasons for why it is or isn't).
Personally I am happy that Mozilla move
Re:MHO about possible IPO (Score:3, Interesting)
Does becoming 'IPOed' that mean big mean Microsoft can come along and buy the whole thing? Or does IPO mean the company offers shares to be bought, but keeps a significant amount for itself to prevent that kind of thing from happening?
All this stuff aside, a Corporation sounds like it's much more capable of kicking ass than a Foundation, even if there's no real difference.
Re:MHO about possible IPO (Score:4, Informative)
Re:MHO about possible IPO (Score:5, Informative)
Re:MHO about possible IPO (Score:2)
Not entirely accurate. This could still happen but it would be up to the few shareholders.
My question is why didn't they go the Non-Profit route? A company can still invest it's profits back into it's projects using this form of a corp.
Re:This is a classic "slippery slope" condition. (Score:2)
Also, aren't the CEOs bound to do with the company whatever the company owners want?