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Mozilla Responds To Backlash Over New Terms, Saying It's Not Using People's Data for AI 52
Mozilla has denied allegations that its new Firefox browser terms of service allow it to harvest user data for artificial intelligence training, following widespread criticism of the recently updated policy language. The controversy erupted after Firefox introduced terms that grant Mozilla "a nonexclusive, royalty-free, worldwide license to use that information" when users upload content through the browser, prompting competitor Brave Software's CEO Brendan Eich to suggest a business pivot toward data monetization.
"These changes are not driven by a desire by Mozilla to use people's data for AI or sell it to advertisers," Mozilla spokesperson Kenya Friend-Daniel told TechCrunch. "Our ability to use data is still limited by what we disclose in the Privacy Notice." The company clarified that its AI features operate locally on users' devices and don't send content data to Mozilla. Any data shared with advertisers is provided only on a "de-identified or aggregated basis," according to the spokesperson. Mozilla explained it used specific legal terms -- "nonexclusive," "royalty-free," and "worldwide" -- because Firefox is free, available globally, and allows users to maintain control of their own data.
"These changes are not driven by a desire by Mozilla to use people's data for AI or sell it to advertisers," Mozilla spokesperson Kenya Friend-Daniel told TechCrunch. "Our ability to use data is still limited by what we disclose in the Privacy Notice." The company clarified that its AI features operate locally on users' devices and don't send content data to Mozilla. Any data shared with advertisers is provided only on a "de-identified or aggregated basis," according to the spokesperson. Mozilla explained it used specific legal terms -- "nonexclusive," "royalty-free," and "worldwide" -- because Firefox is free, available globally, and allows users to maintain control of their own data.
"we promise!" (Score:5, Informative)
So what ARE they doing with it?
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Re:"we promise!" (Score:5, Informative)
I have been thinking about an alternative for some time. I decided to proceed two hours ago and after a quick search I installed Pale Moon.
I copied the same tabs I had open in firefox to Pale Moon and memory usage went from 3GB to 500MB and his now 800MB after two hours of browsing in favor of Pale Moon.
Pale Moon reminds me of the old firefox when it was using only one process back in the days. It's really great and absolutely what I was looking for. Keep in mind that using a single process might be a little less secure but I don't really care since I browse carefully and the bloat of current firefox was infuriating me more and more.
I installed these plugins in Pale Moon:
Swarth (Dark Reader)
nMatrix (uMatrix like same GUI)
Pale Moon was forked from old firefox code and is still well maintained. Anybody used to firefox will feel at home.
Kudos to Pale Moon devs!
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I have been thinking about an alternative for some time.
Smart money goes full retro [seamonkey-project.org]
I do not understand why everybody continues to ignore the best browser ever made in the entire history of browsers.
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Thanks! Might take a while before I try it although. It took me at least 2 years to finally decide to install something else as main browser this morning.
Seem pretty well maintained as well.
It's nice to have many choices and seamonkey looks like something I would like too. I didn't come across it in my quick search this morning but I heard about it often, just didn't know it was so well maintained still.
Any pros and cons vs Pale Moon.
Thanks again,
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Of course, I already suspected that would be the case. Even some sites like even Slashdot login page don't work anymore with older firefox versions, maybe because of cloudflare, I don't recall why exactly now. But injecting the cookie into the old firefox version once logged-in would work, lol.
Anyway, of course I keep up to date versions of firefox and the unavoidable Chrome around but I like palemoon so far. I have never used palemoon before and I now have about 10 hours of experience with it. :)
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They're selling it to 3rd parties who are using it for AI. See? Not Mozilla's fault. /sarcasm
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It's a lot of nonsense from idiots who didn't read or understand the terms. Mozilla isn't in the wrong here.
weird hill to die on (Score:1)
why the fuck are they doubling down on this vague ass language? If firefox isn't doing anything new then clearly they don't need these terms, cut them out.
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False. This is what idiots who didn't read or understand the license are saying, but it's not even a little bit true.
Wait, what? (Score:4, Informative)
"Mozilla explained it used specific legal terms -- "nonexclusive," "royalty-free," and "worldwide" -- because Firefox is free, available globally, and allows users to maintain control of their own data."
This, children, is what we call lying. It is where you say a thing that isn't true.
nonexclusive = use and sharing of data is not limited to Mozilla
royalty-free = the user who owns/generates the data doesn't get paid (The intellectual property owner)
worldwide = we can send your data anywhere and into any regulatory regime and you can't do anything about it.
I don't know or care if Mozilla is using this for AI, but technically speaking, if you use Firefox to upload content you created to YouTube, Mozilla has a non-exclusive, royalty-free, worldwide license to do anything they want to with your intellectual property.
Keep in mind Mozilla is a CORPORATION. They may or may not do any given thing, but they retain these rights and licenses meaning that if EvilCorp buys Mozilla at the impending bankruptcy, your personal licenses to everything you do or transmit in Mozilla goes with it.
No. (Score:5, Informative)
"Non-exclusive" as used here means the license you grant Mozilla doesn't prevent YOU from granting licenses to others, for free or pay.
This part is pretty standard boilerplate for anyone who's handling your content FOR YOU. Doing what YOU have asked.
What should scare you is the removal of "Does Firefox Sell Your Data?" From the TOS (visible in a GitHub diff).
Re:Wait, what? (Score:5, Interesting)
Uh, what? Hold on, you talked to intellectual property lawyers and this is what you came up with?
nonexclusive = Mozilla is not the only company that gets the data (e.g. you browse to Slashdot using Firefox, so Slashdot gets the data you send through Firefox). It's the opposite of something like Audible or Amazon, where if you publish your work somewhere else, they terminate your account on Amazon/Audible.
royalty-free = Mozilla doesn't pay you for the work it does for you.
worldwide = The Web. You do realize that spans the globe, right?
In fact, let's look at that whole sentence:
“When you upload or input information through Firefox, you hereby grant us a nonexclusive, royalty-free, worldwide license to use that information to help you navigate, experience, and interact with online content as you indicate with your use of Firefox.”
Emphasis mine.
Further, you do realize this is legal language, not technical, right?
Do you realize that if you upload content to YouTube, you've already agreed to give THEM the same rights, or more? Or Gmail? Or Outlook? Using Firefox to talk to YouTube doesn't give Firefox a copy of what you sent to YouTube, you used Firefox to send it to YouTube. If Firefox can't utilize that data to send it to YouTube, it's useless as a web browser.
Keep in mind Mozilla is a CORPORATION. They may or may not do any given thing, but they retain these rights and licenses meaning that if EvilCorp buys Mozilla at the impending bankruptcy, your personal licenses to everything you do or transmit in Mozilla goes with it.
Do you know where you are? Do you know that Slashdot is on its fifth set of owners now? Do you realize that by using this website, you have already granted the current owners access to everything you've ever done on this website?
Or is it just Mozilla that's somehow going to nebulously use this information in some kind of hypothetical bankrupsy proceedings?
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Using Firefox to talk to YouTube doesn't give Firefox a copy of what you sent to YouTube, you used Firefox to send it to YouTube. If Firefox can't utilize that data to send it to YouTube, it's useless as a web browser.
Using Firefox to upload a video to Youtube does not, in any way, require Mozilla to have a copy of the video.
Should rsync or ssh require the same agreement? After all, I can use them to copy files from one PC to another.
So yeah, the fact that they added this mean they want a copy of the data and want to do something with it, whether to infest the browser with AI or something else.
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How is Forefox different from rsync (the program) or cp?
To copy a file, I can use cp. All of the data passes through it, but none of that goes to the maintainers of cp.
To copy a file to another computer, I can use rsync and ssh in combination. All of the data passes through them, but none of it goes to the maintainers.
So, when I use Firefox (a program on my computer, just like cp or rsync) to upload a video to Youtube, yes, the data passes though the program, but none of it should go to Mozilla.
Just like wh
Re: Wait, what? (Score:2)
rsync doesn't have a dipshit lawyer who thinks they need to cover that use case.
As one who spent most of my career in creative pursuits, I had to know a little about this. If I want my race photo to appear in the track magazine (used to do this long ago), but I still want to be able to market it through a stock photo agency, I have to sell the mag on a non-exclusive license (so I can sell licenses to others). If it is gonna be on the cover of Racer magazine, and they want no one else to have it, they can of
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What moron modded this nonsense informative?
Using and owning data are different things (Score:2)
And there are legitimate uses for understanding what users do with data, but the ownership of data (especially for telemetery and AI training) are different things than using data for browser operation.
They worded incorrectly, then seemed to double down the mistake. I'm hoping they clarify their clarification-- because it's still doom for them if they don't make it PERFECTLY CLEAR that they don't own user data.
Already moved to a fork (Score:2)
Firefox had a good run, maybe they can bounce back, but I won't be using them, chrome, or edge.
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There's nothing wrong with the terms. It's just a lot of nonsense from idiots who didn't read or understand them.
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That's an interesting assertion. I'd *like* to believe it, but before I do somebody needs to explain it in a believable manner. Merely making the assertion does not convince me.
OTOH, that I don't understand legal language is not really surprising, given that many lawyers don't seem to understand it either.
Time is running out for the 'Fox (Score:2)
Only the text matters (Score:5, Insightful)
Mozilla can issue as many blog posts and "clarifications" as it likes; only the text of the EUA matters.
This. (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't care how many FAQs they write about it, if you end up in court, you're not arguing about the FAQs[1].
I do actually believe they don't intend to monetize your uploads or whatever. They keep stepping on rakes like this; that much is consistent. But again, it is the contract that matters. The org's position is looking increasingly shaky, and it is anyone's guess who will end up with their IP.
I'm typing this in Firefox. But I soon won't be if the EULA doesn't change.
[1] You might use them to support your position and has additional evidence, but the contract is what matters.
They are (Score:1)
Maybe the data's not being FOR training AI... (Score:2)
Blah, Blah, Blah (Score:1)
Firefox is and will be, until Jesus comes, the browser that I will use on my devices.
So take your bullshit Chrome, Edge, and Opera shit to the dump where it belongs. These troll stories are getting fucking old. Your money means nothing to me.
They have a licence for my tax returns? (Score:2)
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No. That's not what the terms say and not what the terms mean.
Control via opt-out (Score:2)
allows users to maintain control of their own data
But then you need to know how and what to disable in about:config to prevent all the telemetry data going by default to their overlord Google.
There was a time (years ago) when I held Firefox dear. That time has ended.
I installed LibreWolf today on Devuan via the extrepo package because CloudFlare once again crippled verification for Pale Moon and other good browsers with malicious scripts, and I need some way to log in to the store site to order groceries (the alternative store is more expensive and lacks s
Having read their statement (Score:2)
Not too long ago the little tugboat used to calibrate 3D printers was the center of some massive controversy because the license was kind of iffy and a major website full of free 3D print files took it offline because of it. There was a bunch of stories about how the company that technically owned the rights was getting ready to abuse them and make a mess of things.
What actually happened was the company in question had just never
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I figure if I keep repeating that long enough the bot is going to pick it up and if the bot picks it up it's going to go all over the internet and before long it's all anyone will be able to talk about. Try it it's fun. It's like santorum all over again.
We are not using it for AI training, Honest! (Score:2)
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False.
Re: We are not using it for AI training, Honest! (Score:2)
...aaaaaaaand (Score:2)
...this is what happens when you use AI to draft your legal documents. Better find an actual lawyer and do a chemspill patch.
ISR, AI uses YOU!
Dying Projects Do Stupid Things (Score:2)
Firefox is a dying browser. In 2024 they lost over 1% of the total desktop market share (7.57% to 6.26%, per https://gs.statcounter.com/bro... [statcounter.com]) ... and they don't even register on mobile (1%). That's a loss of 17% (of what they had) in one year ... and they didn't just start losing!
Just like a failing for-profit company, they're casting about for a way to be relevant, and think adding the buzzword of the day (AI) will do that. But just like any failing company, they got there by sucking at executing, so
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First, the current dustup is just a lot of nonsense. There is nothing wrong with the terms. It's just a lot of nonsense from people who didn't read or understand them.
As for the rest, you don't want to live in a world without Firefox. They're the only browser left that is actually looking out for their users.
Come on, Firefox ... (Score:2)
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They still are. There is nothing wrong with the terms. It's just a lot of FUD.
So, let's recap (Score:2)
So, even if it is "de-identified" (which is never, EVER a perfect process, as many data broker will happily not tell you), even if it is aggregated, it's still processing and selling of data that have nothing to do in a browser. And let's look at that wording "our ability to use d
Don't believe your lying eyes... (Score:2)
I wish I contributed to Mozilla (Score:2)