Waterfox: No AI* Here - A Response to Mozilla's Next Chapter

https://www.waterfox.com/blog/no-ai-here-response-to-mozilla/

No AI* Here - A Response to Mozilla's Next Chapter - Waterfox Blog

Mozilla's pivot to AI first browsing raises fundamental questions about what a browser should be.

Waterfox

LibreWolf is another option. It is a custom version of Firefox, focused on privacy, security and freedom with all bad bits (like LLM/AI, No trackers/telemetry, enhanced privacy etc) removed.

* Repo https://codeberg.org/librewolf

* Home page https://librewolf.net

LibreWolf

A custom version of Firefox, focused on privacy, security and freedom. Please report issues to https://codeberg.org/librewolf/issues.

Codeberg.org
@nixCraft Is "No trackers/telemetry, enhanced privcy" part of the bad bits of firefox? if yes, how are they doing it wrong?
@sebzuen @nixCraft its because this person thinks all telemetry is evil. Quite silly opinion.

@tragivictoria I think we are all misunderstanding each other.

Anyway, which telemetry can be good? I think each data transmission from the consumer to the supplier should be voluntary and actively done. For instance, when sending a crash report.

@sebzuen anything that's not sensitive/private info is fine. There's no reason collecting hardware information is bad.

And opt-in telemetry is worse than not having it at all.

@tragivictoria But to be fair, I am not knowledgeable enough about the intricacies of telemetry development.
I appreciate your opinions; I just argue from a perspective of privacy and democracy.
@sebzuen haha i am also very much pro-privacy :) its just that it's very hard to develop popular software without telemetry, otherwise its really just game of guessing (i am speaking here from context of browsers, like Firefox or desktops, like GNOME)
@tragivictoria
Do you think an active community around a dev project that provides constant testing and feedback might be enough to substitute telemetry?
@sebzuen its of course very important too! But there are things where this isn't enough. Like for example telemetry would be super useful for GNOME to know how many users use wayland or xorg sessions. Instead basically no one had any solid data on the matter. Hard to give more examples, because it really depends what data would be gathered.