• 14 Posts
  • 448 Comments
Joined 7 months ago
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Cake day: November 3rd, 2023

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  • You’re too late to get that job but here is another opportunity!

    This is a part-time on-site volunteer role at my house. As a volunteer, you will be responsible for cooking, cleaning, chopping firewood, and providing other support to the residents. This may include serving drinks to visitors, restocking shelves, organizing inventory, and light house painting. Your role as a volunteer is crucial in ensuring that our household has a positive and seamless home experience.

    Qualifications

    • Excellent customer service and interpersonal skills
    • Ability to work well in a team environment
    • Strong attention to detail and organizational skills
    • Ability to multitask and prioritize tasks effectively
    • Good communication skills
    • Previous experience with R and python programming is an asset
    • Availability to work weekends, nights, and holidays
    • Total subservience and ability to follow orders without question

    We invite you to apply today.









  • Speaking of large numbers of user comments, I was just reading the hacker news discussion. Whatever you think of that site, it’s full of the sort of people who used to be the core of the Firefox user base. People who would help their friends and family get it installed. Web developers who made sure their site works with more than one browser engine. People who know enough to be offended by changes like this one. People who Mozilla needs to reach if it wants to have a future in the web browser market.

    Comments elsewhere are similarly negative. I encourage everyone who cares about Firefox to turn off all the telemetry, or perhaps even consider moving to one of the forks such as Librewolf. If they notice enough of a drop in incoming data collection after this latest move, perhaps there’s still a chance that Mozilla will get the message that they need to change course before it’s too late.




  • Canonical apparently turned on enabled-by-default telemetry for new installs in 2018 which records basic system hardware stats and such. It’s not that much compared to what Firefox sends, but adding it still did damage to their reputation.

    Another thing Ubuntu has in common with Firefox is a continuing long-term decline in market share. As they do things like adding telemetry, flirting with the idea of putting advertising in the package manager, insisting that everyone use snap, et cetera, users have started to go elsewhere. As I did.

    In the case of Ubuntu though, the company’s main business is in serving their corporate customers. If it’s little-used by the rest of us the company might still do well, as I hope they continue to do. Firefox does not share that advantage.


  • Ubuntu telemetry is fairly minimal, as of last time I used it a few years ago. Not remotely comparable to what firefox does. They just want to know what hardware you have, there’s no user behaviour tracking, and it’s fully opt-in (you have to deliberately turn it on when installing). KDE and Gnome have a little something like that as well now, I think. Almost everything else does not.

    Debian has a list (last updated 2023-10) of software among the 97000 packages they distribute which have been found to violate user privacy by “phoning home” for telemetry or other purposes:

    • gnome-calculator - fetches currencies
    • Firefox - multiple issues
    • Thunderbird - opt-out telemetry that is not yet patched for Debian
    • Chromium - phones home in various ways
    • syncthing - version check and lots more
    • cura - phones home in various ways, patched out in Debian
    • azure-cli - collects “anonymous” telemetry by default
    • glances - connects to several online services to discover public IP
    • webext-bulk-media-downloader - loads the website and sends version info
    • Golang - planning on implementing enabled-by-default telemetry



  • They have much in common when it comes to telemetry, in that they both collect quite a lot of it and spend much time and effort to analyze all that data so as to improve the user experience.

    I hadn’t really considered the advertising angle, but now that you mention it I’m sure advertisers would also find all this thoroughly privacy-respecting anonymized data to be of interest when they’re considering the idea of paying for promotion through Firefox Suggest. Mitchell Baker may no longer be in charge of it, but there must still be some highly placed people over there who are fully on board with her vision of turning Firefox into a better advertising platform.


  • console.log(“It is also one of the web developers at Really Quite’s birthday too. Happy birthday Kev.”)

    Good job, web developers. It’s nice clean html.

    For some reason I imagine there might also be a hidden message in the order that the colours of the candles are in, but if so it’s too tricky for me.