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Mozilla The Internet

Mozilla Is Building Context Graph, a 'Recommender System For the Web' (venturebeat.com) 87

Mozilla is looking into ways to build a "better forward button" that helps you understand a topic, and find alternative solutions to a problem. On Wednesday, Firefox-maker announced Context Graph, which in addition also allows browsers to offer useful information without demanding input. From a VentureBeat report: Context Graph is a "recommender system for the web" that is supposed to help the company develop an understanding of browser activity at scale. By tapping into what and how people are browsing, Mozilla hopes to unlock "the next generation of web discovery on the internet." Another example is learning how to do something new, like bike repair. Context Graph should be able to help you learn bike repair based on the links others have navigated to when they attempted to learn the same thing. "This should work regardless of whom you're connected to, because your social network shouldn't be a prerequisite for getting the most from the web," Nick Nguyen, Firefox's vice president of product, said.
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Mozilla Is Building Context Graph, a 'Recommender System For the Web'

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    The latest beta just sent me to this article so I could get a first post!

  • Whatever (Score:5, Interesting)

    by sunking2 ( 521698 ) on Wednesday July 06, 2016 @03:24PM (#52458109)
    Other than tabs, I'm pretty sure I use my web browser almost exactly like I did with Mosaic.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Is it just me, or does Mozilla look a lot like The Fonz in swim trunks right now?

  • by jenningsthecat ( 1525947 ) on Wednesday July 06, 2016 @03:28PM (#52458131)

    before they try to run. At one time Mozilla ran like the wind, then they just ran, then they walked, now they're crawling. Trying to run from where they are now, directly to "develop an understanding of browser activity at scale", (whatever the hell that means), would seem to be WAY beyond their current capabilities. Especially when their share of the market is dropping to the point where whatever data they might collect may not be enough to be statistically meaningful...

    • Their development efforts seen to have turned into 90s microsoft, with just too many developers to actually get anything that works out the door. Most of what they ship now consists of new features that are full of security holes, removal of old features, and constant thrashing of the code that reduces quality and causes things like, "now your configurable toolbars are no longer all configurable; some are, some are not."

      • Seriously? Servo and Rust don't count?
        • by Anonymous Coward

          Count as what? More newly minted CS grads reinventing the wheel?

          • I don't know if you've noticed but most large native applications with millions of users are written in this crapfest called C++. Mozilla may be reinventing the wheel as they're working at a better language but the problem is that virtually nobody uses the wheel, everyone uses the crappy C++ sloth-drawn bobsled. So it just might be the right time for the industry to actually start using one of the wheels in existence or to use this new one.
        • by Anonymous Coward

          What are those? A programming language invented to solve a non existing problem and a re-invention of a wheel? Why not try to fix the damn bugs in current browser and speed it up some more instead of wasting effort on toy projects.

          • How is Rust not related to fixing bugs (or preventing them in the first place) and Servo not related to speeding things up?
            • Web sites loaded faster in the year 2000, even using Sun's Java browser.

              New standards have to be added, but why a lot else?

      • Yeah. I stopped allowing updates a while back.

        So sad, it's like watching a good friend douse himself with gas and set himself on fire. I used to cheerlead Firefox, but I am now a bit embarrassed to admit to using it now. And no, I won't use chrome or IE or edge.

        • What I find weird is this contemporary idea that "updates make you more secure." Well, if security updates were on a different track than features, there would be a good argument for that. But with new bugs and exploits released on a regular basis, this isn't obvious at all. And people will quickly shout the name of a past exploit as a counter-argument, but all that proves is that trust was misplaced to begin with; it isn't as if when those exploits were announced, people who had been updating constantly ha

        • by Anonymous Coward

          Mozilla was infiltrated by the millennial fairies. It's over for them, say goodbye and move on.
           

        • Comment removed based on user account deletion
          • QTWeb has ended it seems (last release in 2013), maybe what you're looking for is Qupzilla which is maintained and the same idea.

            K-meleon is still developed, which I didn't expect. So they made the switch from old school Gecko to tracking Firefox ESR (24, 31, 38)

  • FTFY (Score:5, Insightful)

    by QuietLagoon ( 813062 ) on Wednesday July 06, 2016 @03:29PM (#52458141)
    By tapping into what and how people are browsing, Mozilla hopes to unlock "the next generation of data harvesting on the internet."
    • Re:FTFY (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 06, 2016 @03:41PM (#52458213)

      Privacy issues aside the main problem I have with tracking this information to "improve" your experience is that it gets in the way.

      Google starts to think it knows you and serves up certain results because "it's you", when you run the same query on a totally different engine (like Duck Duck Go) you get a much better result set because it makes no preconceptions about what you were looking for based on past searches / browsing habits / etc

    • How is this different from a Google search? Google spends a lot of time trying to figure out how sites and searches are related to one another. Mozilla thinks they can do it better because they can "harvest" data directly from the browser? I doubt it. And, that's ignoring the privacy issue of sending my full time stamped browsing history to a private company...

  • Oh no! (Score:5, Funny)

    by fustakrakich ( 1673220 ) on Wednesday July 06, 2016 @03:34PM (#52458165) Journal

    Clippy is back!

    • It looks like you're writing a joke referencing Clippy, the notorious Microsoft Office feature. Would you like help?
  • by Anonymous Coward

    overpaid managers/developers making solutions in search of a problem?

    Mozilla is pissing away far too much time 'keeping their browser state of the art' and not enough time 'fixing security issues endemic in their browser since time immemorial.'

    If the only other Web 2.0 compatible choices weren't based on either Google's fork of Webkit, or Microsoft rendering engines, I'd tell them to get boned.

    That said, maybe some of you code-savvy slashdot nerds can put in some hours on netsurf web browser (netsurf-browse

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 06, 2016 @03:35PM (#52458171)

    Another useless feature and, most importantly, a privacy nightmare by Mozilla, probably the 100th in the last 2 years.There's no "value added" that will ever persuade me sharing my browsing history with you to let you do your unrequested "suggestions".

    GO TO HELL, Mozilla.

    Time to look for firefox forks.

  • by willoughby ( 1367773 ) on Wednesday July 06, 2016 @03:38PM (#52458191)

    I hate -*HATE*- having a machine try to read my mind. And a web browser? No, thanks. Just get out of the way & let me do what I want, the way I want.

    • by asa ( 33102 )

      What if "what I want" is to be able to visit the sites that are linking to a YouTube video I'm watching. Today I can't easily do that because YouTube doesn't want me leaving YouTube.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        No one cares, Asa. Fix your shitty browser first.

      • by Zontar The Mindless ( 9002 ) <plasticfish,info&gmail,com> on Wednesday July 06, 2016 @04:49PM (#52458587) Homepage

        Hi Asa!

        What *I* want is for you guys to stop breaking my UI, my extensions, and my workflow.

        I am totally uninterested in how you guys think I should experience the Web. I am interested in getting stuff done.

        Start listening to your users again, and stop using us as your friggerty UX guinea pigs already.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        If you use extensions like Request Policy, you see that everybody's tracking everybody, all the time. It is somewhat natural that a browser maker, having direct access to the users' browsing habits, wants in on the action, but remember this: We can't do much about the servers tracking us, because there is only one Facebook and one Youtube. We will choose another browser though. You have added far too many privacy-invading features to the browser already, and some of them are well hidden. It takes a lot of e

    • I hate -*HATE*- having a machine try to read my mind. And a web browser? No, thanks. Just get out of the way & let me do what I want, the way I want.

      So you never, ever have used spell checkers, tab autocompletion, search suggestions - or Google's web search, for that matter? Google Search is by definition the #1 "machine that tries to read your mind" in order to show the most relevant pages for a query term.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Yet more tracking/data mininig.

    Fuck off.

  • Netscape Navigator had the What's Related [ariadne.ac.uk] button in 2001.
  • How about making a browser that is not slow and a memory hog?

  • This sound something like a pimped out ShiftSpace. BTW, what happend to that?
    I thought that was a pretty neat idea - now it appears all traces of ShiftSpace seem to be lost.

    Can I still get ShiftSpace somewhere? Is it a distributed thing or does it rely on servers for it's content?
    And how is that with this new Mozilla thing?

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