If Mozilla did that, we'd have monthly news stories about them adding ads into the client, removing features people depend on, cramming in AI where it doesn't belong, abruptly making all sorts of controversial ToS changes, going back on old promises, and all kinds of other things we know and love Mozilla for. All before they'd get bored and discontinue the product after a couple of years.
Or maybe they'd just buy some existing closed source Slack competitor, promise to open source it, and then just never get around to it. You know, like how they bought Pocket in 2017, promised to make it open source, but somehow never got around to it before discontinuing it in 2025.
FF is plenty competitive on the technical and feature front. It's market share is not a reflection of technical merit.
What's more, next to Linux itself it is maybe the only case I can see where a major piece of user facing software is kept competitive with the Apple/Google/MS tools.
LibreOffice or Nextcloud are technically far further behind Office and Google's online offerings.
Which therefore begs the question: Who else is in a position to do this?
At first glance, Moz with Firefox + a suite of self-hosted team and productivity stuff that works well in Firefox would make a ton of sense...
mort96|2 months ago
Or maybe they'd just buy some existing closed source Slack competitor, promise to open source it, and then just never get around to it. You know, like how they bought Pocket in 2017, promised to make it open source, but somehow never got around to it before discontinuing it in 2025.
jonnycomputer|2 months ago
PunchyHamster|2 months ago
Certhas|2 months ago
What's more, next to Linux itself it is maybe the only case I can see where a major piece of user facing software is kept competitive with the Apple/Google/MS tools.
LibreOffice or Nextcloud are technically far further behind Office and Google's online offerings.
Which therefore begs the question: Who else is in a position to do this?
At first glance, Moz with Firefox + a suite of self-hosted team and productivity stuff that works well in Firefox would make a ton of sense...