this post was submitted on 09 Jul 2024
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Eh, that honestly doesn't sound too bad, but good callout. Here's their article about it, and the relevant snippet:
Absolutely disable it if you're still uncomfortable with that, but don't knee-jerk disable it because ads. I'm hopeful that this is good enough for advertisers so they can stop the intrusive spying. I'm not a big fan of my browser tracking this info, but maybe it's better on net than alternatives.
Unpopular opinion, but I use Firefox because I care about privacy and the spirit of the Mozilla manifesto, and this new enabled-by-default advertisement feature snuck into the browser is at odds with both.
Mozilla never even gave their users a warning in their browser, which is even worse than how Chrome handles it (also enabled by default, but they at least included a notification with a corpo-speak justification that includes similar language about "options" and "privacy".
I suppose. They do launch the release page after an update, which has a link to the release notes. The release notes link to the page I linked, and that page describes how it works and how to disable it, which is just a setting in the privacy section.
So while I'd like it a bit more front-and-center (i.e. display it on that release page), I don't think they're trying to hide anything here.