(no title)
apalerwuss | 1 year ago
I'm not saying that this definitely makes a material difference, but it certainly changes the framing of it. The way he has framed it makes it sound like Mozilla has given itself carte blanche to do what it wants -- but the little caveat at the end of the sentence really does change the narrative a little bit. So why cut off a sentence half-way through it -- is it maybe to make it sound worse? For that reason alone, I can't take this guy seriously.
tgsovlerkhgsel|1 year ago
- Mozilla explicitly deleting "we don't sell your data" statements across their documentation
- Following up to criticism that the statement is vague, bullshitty and open to interpretation with statements that are even more vague, bullshitty and open to interpretation.
By now, they've had time to notice that something is not right and that they need to make a clear statement, and they haven't taken the opportunity.
nusl|1 year ago
See: https://github.com/mozilla/bedrock/commit/d459addab846d8144b...
dizhn|1 year ago
simpaticoder|1 year ago
immibis|1 year ago
It will still be interpreted to mean "...for any purpose" by Mozilla somehow.
mijoharas|1 year ago
> to help you navigate, experience, and interact with online content as you indicate with your use of Firefox."
I don't read that as a caveat, so I'm assuming it means something different to you. To reword slightly and hopefully show how that sentence is coming across to me:
> As you have indicated by using Firefox you have given us the right to...
belorn|1 year ago
In this case I don't have the reaction, but I will agree that in general its a good idea to include more rather than less.
The redacted part here looks to be a GDPR boilerplate for consent. GDRP require consent to be specific. In order to do so the lawyers of Mozilla seems to have used industry standard phrasing to comply with the law, such as "to help you navigate, enhance experience, and interact with {INSERT SERVICE/PRODUCT}".
For those with some interest in legal history, there is similar stories in other boilerplate texts that consumer get exposed to. I always find the background to the WARRANTY DISCLAIMER text to have a fairly funny historical background that is a few centuries old legal case regarding a mill axle. The current form we see now was created as the first example in a list from US regulation guidelines (which reference the mill axle case). A company can use any other form given in that guideline, but as it happens, everyone just jumped on the first example, slapped it onto stuff and shipped it. Lawyers know it is valid for US trade regulation and that was apparently enough for the rest of the world.
misnome|1 year ago
We weren't born yesterday, and companies pull this shit all the time. This sentence is meaningless. You could use this sentence to justify literally any behaviour.
One _easy_ way to read this change:
> "... to help you interact with online content"
Selling your data to have more relevant ads could easily be justified as helping you interact with online content
> as you indicate with your use of Firefox.
Using firefox indicates that you want us to do this.
Or,
we made it an opt-out that is quietly rolled out in an update.
lupusreal|1 year ago
If it's simply a matter of principle, quoting the full section with no abridgements because we're larping like we're in a court room or something, whatever. But get real, that section doesn't make Mozilla look any better.
bolognafairy|1 year ago
theamk|1 year ago
> Mozilla has just deleted the following:
> “Does Firefox sell your personal data?”
> “Nope. Never have, never will. And we protect you from many of the advertisers who do. Firefox products are designed to protect your privacy. That’s a promise. "
That tweet is 100% correct, see https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43209001 for two links, all references to "not selling personal data" are gone. There is no missing context or truncation here, and this says nothing about terms-of-use (except commit message but that's immaterial)
binary132|1 year ago
For example, “we promise”.
thorw93040494|1 year ago
rectang|1 year ago
[deleted]
nindalf|1 year ago
And that's before getting into the politics of the people working on the language, of which I won't say more.
Here was me thinking we had at least one discussion where the US culture war hadn't metastasised. But I guess in the long run twitter.com/lundukejournal and friends will eventually win. Can't say I'm looking forward to it.
unknown|1 year ago
[deleted]
fergie|1 year ago