The author may be a right-wing fellow. Nonetheless, the data he exposes are taken from official Mozilla docs.

  • TheRtRevKaiser@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Hey folks - Just want to note that the !Technology mod team is aware of the reports on this post. After some discussion we decided to leave the thread up, since it had already generated a decent amount of good discussion despite the problems with the article itself. However, I do want to make it clear that we do not condone intentionally misgendering people.

    If you have any questions or feedback, feel free to reply here or DM me.

  • Lionir [he/him]@beehaw.org
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    This “report” is exactly what I would expect from Lunduke. It is really sad that this reactionary content comes from someone who I once thought was cool.

    The only part I can agree on : the execs at Mozilla are getting paid too much in the current situation.

    Now to get to the real meat.

    The combined spendings to political organizations make up around 1m$. This is less than the donations made to Mozilla foundation. Considering the very political nature of the foundation, these spendings were likely authorized there.

    Now, why would a technology company spend on political organisations? Well, simply put : technology is political. People trying to peddle that technology is not political are trying to sell you the status quo.

    Technology companies spend insane amounts of money on lobbying.

    Now, why would Mozilla spend money on left-leaning organisations? Well, simply put : left-leaning politics (though embedded in neoliberal Californian ideals of the internet) are embedded at the core of Mozilla from the start with Mozilla manifesto.

    I’m not gonna get into why Lunduke thinks that these organisations are bad but consider it a red flag.

    Now, what I would ask to anyone reading this : why do you think Lunduke is ignoring this? Why would Lunduke try to paint this picture?

    • yetAnotherUser@feddit.de
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      I’d say the CEO is the only one who’s overpaid. The other executives make between $200k to $370k, which is a lot of money but barely noteworthy imo.

      • TehPers@beehaw.org
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        If they’re living in SF, then it’s even less money. It’s a lot, don’t get me wrong, but it takes a lot of money to afford to live in (or around) that city.

      • Lionir [he/him]@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        Yeah, for sure, the CEO is the clear outlier. I just count them as an exec though that might be misusing how that term is used colloquially.

    • davehtaylor@beehaw.org
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      This “report” is exactly what I would expect from Lunduke. It is really sad that this reactionary content comes from someone who I once thought was cool.

      It’s sad. When I discovered the Linux Action Show back in 2006 or 2007, he seemed like a fun and interesting person. But it’s amazing how quickly that perception proved false. And his Twitter feed in 2020 was a dumpster fire.

      Well, simply put : left-leaning politics (though embedded in neoliberal Californian ideals of the internet) are embedded at the core of Mozilla from the start with Mozilla manifesto.

      Which is so fascinating given the involvement of people like Brendan Eich, and also descending from noted Libertarian and capitalist Marc Andreesen

      • Lionir [he/him]@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        I mean, the neolib Californian ideals of the internet was anarchist so always anti-gov but not anti-corporate. That’s how you end up with compromise points in the Mozilla manifesto like this:

        Commercial involvement in the development of the internet brings many benefits; a balance between commercial profit and public benefit is critical.

        Principle 9

        Worth mentioning that Eich came from the Netscape days and was highly influential on a technical level.

        • davehtaylor@beehaw.org
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          Worth mentioning that Eich came from the Netscape days and was highly influential on a technical level.

          Oh yeah for sure. Foundational on the browser, and with developing JavaScript. But a shit person. I guess the Prop8 business was finally a bridge too far, PR-wise

      • zaphod@lemmy.ca
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        Disregard everything below. I mistook the comment about neo-liberalism for a quote from this guy.

        I’m leaving the text up for context, but this criticism is misdirected.

        ==

        It says everything you need to know that he (I suspect deliberately) confuses neo-liberal for left-wing ideology.

        Neo-liberal = capitalist with a smoking jacket and a fancy degree on the wall.

        SV is absolute rife with anarcho-capitalist ideology. I can only dream of a version of SV that actually carries some measure of economically liberal ideology.

        My guess is this guy is confusing social liberalism with economic liberalism. But, of course, that’s the entire right wing schtick these days.

        • Lionir [he/him]@beehaw.org
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          I might be confused but Lunduke doesn’t mention neoliberalism or left-wing ideology in that article - I did.

          Of course neoliberalism is to the right of what I’d consider to be left-wing and it works very much hand in hand with conservatism but it’s usually socially liberal. I think Mozilla definitely fits a weird bill, it’s hard to pinpoint because the principles are largely about individual rights yet the addendum definitely feels atleast socially liberal. That said, it seems most of the causes they support are left-wing.

    • zephyrvs@lemmy.ml
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      The problem isn’t that they’re spending money on political causes and I wouldn’t even expect them to do some false balance bs where they’d spend money on left and right wing politics, but spending money on political causes with almost zero transparency (like what do orgs do with the money, how effective are they, are they actually aligned with certain values, who is involved in these orgs, etc) seems fishy as fuck.

    • honk@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      Ieft leaning? These orgs sound more like the typical liberal right centrist orgs from america lol

  • SmoochyPit@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    It is stated within the article that Mckensie Mack is non-binary, however the author chose to refer to them with she/her pronouns. Regardless of “politics” and “beliefs”, I don’t agree with ignoring or disrespecting somebody’s identity.

  • ulkesh@beehaw.org
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    So where’s Lunduke’s articles on the numerous right-wing shady organizations? I haven’t listened to or read anything by this hack in many years now because of the fact that he has a clear agenda motivated by his own political bullshit.

    Maybe find an article that is written by someone reputable and post that to numerous communities.

    • davehtaylor@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      This right here.

      He was always a shit. But seeing him in 2020 parroting alt-right talking points and defending the Proud Boys showed exactly what kind of person he is.

    • ichbinjasokreativ@beehaw.org
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      I don’t really care if someone fights in both directions if their points are valid. Misgendering or not, mozilla has had some troubling developments internally and it’s good people shed light on it.

      • ulkesh@beehaw.org
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        Shedding light with bias is the whole problem with media in the current landscape. They’re never done objectively. All it does is provide a feedback loop within the echo chamber, further dividing people with the result of “see, I told you the other side is bad.” Motivations matter. Lunduke has, in the past, proven where his motivations are. If he actually reported on all political, economic, technological goings-on in an objective manner, given he is a pretty good communicator, then I’d withdraw my opposition to him. Until such time, I keep to my opinion of him and have no interest in his articles. I can form my own opinion of Mozilla independent of what Lunduke or FOX News or MSNBC tries to get me to ingest.

  • ɔiƚoxɘup@beehaw.org
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    Given the author’s political affiliation and the apparent lack of coverage of this anywhere else I find it difficult to make any conclusions other than those that would indicate the author’s politically makes.

  • CyberCatBytes@kbin.social
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    It’s so painfully obvious that the article was written to push a personal agenda rather than objectively address the topic

  • SHITPOSTING_ACCOUNT@feddit.de
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    Without having read the whole thing, so I’m not sure how clear the article is about it: the important part is that donations to Mozilla go to the Mozilla Foundation, which does the political campaigning/social justice etc. stuff, while Firefox development happens in the Mozilla Corporation funded with search engine deals etc.

    So again:

    Donations to Mozilla do not go towards Firefox development

    • sab@kbin.social
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      And looking independently at what the Mozilla Foundation does: Thank God for the Mozilla Foundation. The do incredibly important work and is as far as I know the strongest advocacy group for a free and open net.

      • scratchee@feddit.uk
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        1 year ago

        The EFF is probably competitive there. But clearly they’re both on the same side of most issues, so not really a competition.

    • entropicdrift@lemmy.sdf.org
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      I think this approach is doomed. People only care about Mozilla because of Firefox and Firefox is falling behind again, no doubt coinciding with the mass layoffs and the ejection of the Servo engine. They’ve caught up with Chrome on most fronts a year or three ago when their reinvented CSS and layout engine was released, but they’re still on the back foot these days.

      This is incorrect. Firefox recently surpassed Chrome in a key benchmark and has generally been on a roll lately.

      Yes, their current iterative improvements are not as sexy as the big release of Quantum, but to say they’re currently falling behind is the opposite of the truth. They’ve just pulled ahead.

      • Firefox beats that particular benchmark but gets its ass handed to it in every other benchmark. Chrome also boasts about having the best performance.

        I’ve run the benchmarks on my machine and Chrome’s score (as well as Gnome Web’s) is about twice that of Firefox’s. The practical performance difference on Android is night and day as well.

        I’m sticking with Firefox (because Google sucks, Google’s web monopoly sucks, and the lack of addons on mobile sucks) but performance certainly isn’t the reason I do.

        • Audacity9961@feddit.ch
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          This is not correct.

          arewefastyet.com shows very clearly that although chrome beats firefox in some benchmarks, firefox trades blows with it and is similar to or faster in others.

          • I’m on Linux and Android and those benchmarks show that Chrome is clearly faster. There are some benchmarks where Firefox wins, but they’re a minority. I still find it weird that the graphs have better scores at the bottom. I’m counting 12 advantages for Chrome and 5 for Firefox on my platform.

            Maybe Firefox on Windows is better, but Chrome is still just better on my computer and phone.

        • Ganbat@lemmyonline.com
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          Chrome also boasts about having the best performance.

          Meanwhile, in the real world, running the two side-by-side tends to spell a whole different picture.

  • mathemachristian[he]@lemm.ee
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    The author may be a right-wing fellow. Nonetheless, the data he exposes is not fake!

    This should not be noteworthy much less be sufficient to make the article seem credible.

      • src@lemmy.ml
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        Someone’s political beliefs aren’t indicative of how well they can form an argument. People can misrepresent data regardless of their political leanings, this whole talking point in the comments is irrelevant.

          • src@lemmy.ml
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            The way you’re framing it seems disingenuous. You act like only people on the right lie and spread misinformation (and they do!). It feels like you’re making a childish jab at the right because you don’t like them.

            Left-wing people and right-wing people both lie to you plenty, because political leanings have nothing to do with it.

            I’m not claiming the piece itself is truthful, but you’ve got your head deep in the sand if you think the right wing is the only group lying to you, while the left & everyone else is truthful.

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    I’ve heard that it wouldn’t it be possible due to tax laws, but I do wish that you could donate directly to Mozilla Corporation itself. The foundation’s advocacy work is important, but it would also be important to ensure Firefox’s continued development without them having to rely on Google

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    And this is one of the many reasons I don’t donate to Firefox. Firefox employees should really fork that project and make it better than what it is now instead of just being Google’s dog + an excuse to pay millions to a single person and hundreds of thousands to random individuals, who have nothing to do with Firefox.

    400M in cash could go to a lot of development efforts. They could rewrite Firefox entirely in Rust, make it run on any platform, move the needle on web technologies in a big way, hell, they could make their own damn phone with that kind of money, or even write their own competitor to ChromeOS.

    But instead…

    • swnt@feddit.de
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      And what do you do after three years? Then the cash will be used up.

      Mozilla isn’t just developing the Firefox browser. Technology is inherently political - and educating people and influencing actors politically on the free and open web is very important. Firefox is much less likely to mis-align away from their browser users than chrome simply because they don’t have the misaligned incentives like the chrome Browser which is equally made by the largest internet advertising firm of the world.

      They even has created FirefoxOS for phone at some point in the past 10 years. But I don’t remember what happened with that.

      • aranym@lemmy.name
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        It’s worth noting that KaiOS, a fork of Firefox OS, has been successful - particularly in developing markets.

        • astraeus@programming.dev
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          This is reassuring, I’ve been debating installing Ubuntu’s phone OS on my old Sony Xperia. It’s great that it’s not a complete bust to have a nice FOSS OS on phones. Mozilla just didn’t have the resources or wherewithal to follow through with Firefox OS and that’s just how it goes.

    • SnowdenHeroOfOurTime@unilem.org
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      What are you on about? This is super confusing to me. Mozilla does a lot of great work. It’s insanely hard to make and develop a web browser… Are you aware of that? Apple probably spends a large fraction of the amount Mozilla does and yet safari benefits more from open source than Mozilla and is still one of the biggest shit piles on the planet.

      • Safari makes most of their web engine open source. Android originally used Webkit for everything related to browsers, that’s why the Android WebView API is full of WebKit references. Webkit is now just Safari without the nice Apple shell. It runs on basically any OS, with varying levels of hardware acceleration support.

        Safari on iOS may be neutered by Apple’s fear of web apps eating their extreme App Store profits, but on desktop the engine isn’t that bad. It had notifications long before they became a problematic missing feature on iOS, for instance. It got WebP support and other stuff Safari on mobile lacked for a long time because desktop browsers could just use the open source libraries already out there.

        I occasionally use Gnome Web if I want to quickly look something up without restoring all my tabs, and I find WebKit to be a fine browser engine most of the time. It even has PWA support on desktop, which Firefox has decided isn’t worth investing in.

        • Lionir [he/him]@beehaw.org
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          I find WebKit to be a fine browser engine most of the time.

          It is worth mentioning that the WebKit port for GTK does not support WebRTC and that it is not supported at all by Apple. It’s an effort by Igalia, one person from Red Hat and volunteers.

          There’s also essentially no WebKit browser for windows. WebKit is often slow at adopting new web technologies as well.

          All that to say - WebKit is not the example of a success outside of helping big corporations to make their own big proprietary browsers.

        • SnowdenHeroOfOurTime@unilem.org
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          All I know is that as a frontend Dev, features in safari are about 5-10 years late to the party. the world’s first trillion dollar company is years behind a non profit…

          • It strongly depends on what features you mean. Safari has excellent Javascript support and mostly lacks the Google web APIs. CSS support is also pretty good from what I can tell. I’ve never bothered to test on Safari (don’t have a device that runs it and I won’t buy one for it either) but I don’t think I saw anything go wrong last time I took a look using someone else’s phone.

            Safari does suffer from the “major updates come with the OS so features come out once or twice a year” problem which is a pain, but the worst parts are all iOS specific.

            • SnowdenHeroOfOurTime@unilem.org
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              This is something I deal with daily. Safari has awful support for new-ish features. Combine that with a requirement to support a couple versions back like my company does and you’re basically limited to what the web was 10 years ago. Safari is the new IE.

              • Chewy@discuss.tchncs.de
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                Safari is the new IE.

                From a feature perspective, yes. But with the dominance of Google’s Chrome and them pushing awful web API’s I’d say the title of “the new IE” goes to Chrome.

                • SnowdenHeroOfOurTime@unilem.org
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                  Google’s business practices are God awful, yes. Apple’s are too, in a different way. In the end, Google’s probably are worse but from a technology standpoint at least they are not seeking to ignore web standards. They’re trying to create them. In the case of the authentication API it’s a shit ass standard, but that’s not what they have done historically. Google has mostly embraced and helped push standards through which made the web better. Apple has actively despised and resisted standards.

                  But I’m not sure why we are comparing these two evil tech companies. Firefox and other browser makers have also supported modern web standards while apple hates the idea of them. The result is a shitty ass browser that behaves like 7 years old Firefox or something. That was my only point.

            • SnowdenHeroOfOurTime@unilem.org
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              I’ve never bothered to test on Safari (don’t have a device that runs it and I won’t buy one for it either)

              This explains why you don’t think safari is that bad. Lol, you don’t test in it. It’s fucking bad. Every time I think I’m doing some safe that safari can’t botch and don’t test for a few days in safari, I’m shown what a foolish thought that is. The types of sites I work on have some less common features admittedly, but every other browser, even silk browser on ancient Kindle devices, works flawlessly most times while safari has a problem with SO much. Even back when we supported IE 11 (trident) the weird issues were worse on safari.

              • 🦊 OneRedFox 🦊@beehaw.org
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                Hardware and the fact that their products became bourgie status symbols. Their aesthetic game is on point and UI is fairly polished, but their software can be super limited in annoying ways.

    • ichbinjasokreativ@beehaw.org
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      Use LibreWolf. I’ve switched to it from Brave because it’s counted as firefox market share but it gets rid of all the non-browser features (Pocket, Telemetry, etc.) and enables some interesting flags in the config (ResistFingerprinting for example).

  • MrApples@lemmy.ca
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    A Lunduke article??? Ewww. To the unsub button I go! Thought beehaw was better than this…