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Strit , in Privacy-Preserving" Attribution: Mozilla Disappoints Us Yet Again
@Strit@lemmy.linuxuserspace.show avatar

You already posted one post about this…

Vincent ,
FuckyWucky , in Firefox enables user tracking

“Firefox is just another US-corporate product with an ‘open source’ sticker on it.”

unlike EU-corporate products

Dirk ,
@Dirk@lemmy.ml avatar

But what are real alternatives that …

  • support MV2 and MV3 WebExtensions
  • are not Chromium-based
  • are open source
  • do not spy on users
deliri ,
@deliri@layer8.space avatar

@Dirk

@FuckyWucky

Librewolf Browser? I dont know if it support MV2 and MV3

deliri ,
@deliri@layer8.space avatar

@Dirk

@FuckyWucky

But working fine for my usecases

Max_P , in How to Use the gpasswd Command on Linux
@Max_P@lemmy.max-p.me avatar

Same but without all the ads and blogspam wording: man.archlinux.org/man/core/shadow/gpasswd.1.en

verdigris , in Firefox enables user tracking

This is misinformation. The setting in question is not a “privacy breach setting,” it’s to use a new API which, for sites that use it, sends advertisers anonymized data about related ad clicks instead of the much more privacy-breaching tracking data that they normally collect. This is only a good thing for users, which is why the setting is automatically checked.

jlsalvador ,

It’s illegal in Europe to have an opt-out checked by default, must be an opt-in unchecked by default. This is one of the reason that Microsoft has always troubles in Europe about privacy and opt-out services.

Vincent ,

That only applies to personally-identifiable information.

gnuhaut ,

This does not prevent regular ad tracking, this provides additional data to advertisers. It also means Mozilla is now tracking me, and then Mozilla does this “anonymizing” on their servers. I do not trust Mozilla with this data, and I don’t trust that no way can be found de-anonymize or combine this data with other data ad networks already collect.

This is not in my interest at all. This data should not be collected. The ad networks can suck it, why should I help them?

blog.privacyguides.org/…/mozilla-disappoints-us-y…

Vincent ,

Advertisers can already easily get this data without this setting, and any measures you take to block ads also by definition affect this setting.

Meanwhile, if this works and becomes widely available, regulators will be able to take measures against user surveillance without having to succumb to the ad industry’s argument that they won’t know whether their ads work.

And yes, this provides data to advertisers, but it’s data about their ads, not about users.

gnuhaut ,

Ah yes, the hypothetical second step, in which tracking is going to be outlawed (I’m not holding my breath), except, of course, for the third party services that do the aggregating, which will “sell” (literal quote) the aggregate data, so I guess these are by semantic sophistry not adtech companies but something else.

I’m so glad this genius “plan” can be used to justify Mozilla funneling data to adtech firms right now, because in some hypothetical future timeline this somehow can be construed with a bunch of hand-waving and misdirection to be in my interest.

How about instead we have a browser that only cares about the users, and not give a fuck about adtech? Its number one goal should be to treat adtech as hostile, and fight to ruin that whole industry.

j4k3 ,
@j4k3@lemmy.world avatar

Are you trying to tell me that the host server is showing the ad, because last I checked, with my whitelist firewall, I never see ads because all ads are links to the ad server you are actually visiting. It is no different than opening up the webpage and connection to them. They get all the same fingerprinting info.

I’m not saying one way or another here, but there is no such thing as anonymous data collection. It only takes 2-3 unique identifiers to connect a person between a known and anonymous data set and there are almost always quite a few more unique identifiers than this in any given dataset. When I hear anyone say stalkerware is anonymous, I assume they are no longer just a privateer of a foreign drug cartel level state, instead they are full blown slave trader pirates fit for the gallows or worse.

MentalEdge , in Firefox enables user tracking
@MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz avatar

The way it works is supposed to anonymously allow the measuring of advertising performance. Which ads do well with which kinds of users. Instead of tracking each individual user this tracks context, meaning what site the ad was seen on etc. Thereby providing a way to know what kinds of ads work with what kinds of users without profiling every individual in the world.

That is what it’s supposed to do. Data still goes to an allegedly “trusted third party” (let’s encrypt, apparently) which then does this anonymization.

The idea is a lot less egregious, but it’s still only a good idea assuming you agree ads would be a good and ethical way to make the internet go round, if only they weren’t profiling everyone. I don’t.

DmMacniel , in Firefox enables user tracking
@DmMacniel@feddit.org avatar

So you didn’t care reading up what PPA is, eh?

But yeah I agree with the toot, we need more browsers heck even more browser engines to not end with just one engine controlled by fucking Google.

pop , in Firefox enables user tracking

The original mastodon post was with more details, and some drama, but the guy is trying to spam this link everywhere he can. so desperate for attention. lol

thepiguy , in Everything wrong with DroidCam and how to solve it

I just use scrcpy. They have instructions on their github.

mnmalst , in ThemeChanger 0.12.0 - now it can set the theme of libadwaita apps

Looks nice and useful thanks

I get this error using it for the first time.

[Errno 2] No such file or directory: ‘/home/xxx/.config/gtk-4.0/gtk.css’

Considering that file doesn’t exist the app might create it if necessary?

Cheers

alex11 OP ,

Hmm, will look into it

Vincent , in Firefox enables user tracking
jherazob , in Firefox enables user tracking
@jherazob@fedia.io avatar

This is after they bought an ad company last month, Mozilla is compromised now

gnuhaut , in Privacy-Preserving" Attribution: Mozilla Disappoints Us Yet Again

The CTO of Mozilla and some other employee are posting on r/firefox defending this shit.

They say it is their job to help the adtech industry, by finding a compromise between my interests and Facebook & co’s interest. Only they get 90% of their revenue from adtech, so their actual job is to sell me out.

This “plan” involves collecting additional data on behalf of adtech right now, and then there’s a hypothetical second step, in which they will lobby to force this new system on everyone. Only (a) this second step is not going to happen, and (b) instead of being tracked by adtech companies, I’d now be tracked by “trusted third parties” or some shit which then sell my data, in aggregated form, to adtech companies. Wow. Great improvement this, we now have middlemen that are, uh, by semantic re-definition, not adtech companies.

So the actual second step is “???” and the third step is presumably “profit”.

makeasnek , in Privacy-Preserving" Attribution: Mozilla Disappoints Us Yet Again
@makeasnek@lemmy.ml avatar

Firefox user and evangelist of over a decade. Fuck Firefox for this.

boredsquirrel , in ThemeChanger 0.12.0 - now it can set the theme of libadwaita apps
@boredsquirrel@slrpnk.net avatar

Does GNOME really need an app to change the theme?

KDE plasma has this natively…

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