theregister.com

hydroptic , to Firefox in Mozilla restores Firefox add-ons banned in Russia

Browser maker decided not to follow Putin's orders. Well done

Only after it caused a PR flap for them, though

Auzy ,

Not really honestly. I think their concerns were valid until they investigated.

Everyone thinks it's easy to ignore legal demands. But there is a reason why most abuse isn't reported to police.

I believe their story honestly

hydroptic ,

Yeah that's a fair point, although it's still a bit… well, funny (not "funny ha ha") that they even temporarily blocked those extensions. Not sure what Roskomnadzor could have done if Mozilla had refused even a temporary block, at least assuming the foundation doesn't have any legal entities in Russia which they may well have

lienrag ,

@hydroptic

Weren't they afraid for their workers in the country ?
Taking time to assess the consequences before making a rash decision seems legit to me...

@Auzy

Auzy ,

Even if there is no legal entities in Russia though, they might have remote workers

RestrictedAccount , to Firefox in Mozilla restores Firefox add-ons banned in Russia

My guess is that they complied long enough to get their people the F^€k out of Russia.

autotldr Bot , to Firefox in Firefox 127's private window handling angers users

This is the best summary I could come up with:


The latest Firefox 127 appeared on June 11 with a modest list of changes – automatically reloading the browser when the OS reboots, closing duplicate tabs, and requiring more authentication to access stored passwords.

A change Mozilla didn't mention in the release notes has users complaining online, though.

Users complained on Mozilla's forums and on Reddit at the time, but it was at least possible to recombine the icons with the option in about:config – but no longer.

As you might imagine, people are not happy, although according to the official response in this complaint, it looks like the change will be reverted in Firefox 128:

According to this thread, users of Firefox on Apple iOS are finding that if you have both a main and private Firefox instances open, when the main one is closed, all the tabs in the private instance are closed too.

Slip-ups like this suggest to us that, as has long been the case, the Firefox developers lack a good understanding of how its remaining followers use it, and why they stick with it.


The original article contains 406 words, the summary contains 179 words. Saved 56%. I'm a bot and I'm open source!

cloudless OP ,

Bad bot. Completely missing the points.

Zachariah , to Firefox in Firefox 127's private window handling angers users
@Zachariah@lemmy.world avatar

Yeah, about:config is one of the best things about Firefox. It allows a standard user not to stumble into settings that would lead to frustration or needing help. But it also lets power users use Firefox the way they want to. I’m always annoyed when a setting is removed from there.

Oisteink , to Firefox in Firefox 127's private window handling angers users

Yes - this is why my dad (80) and my nephew (23) stopped using Firefox . It’s the only reason anyone use Firefox and without it nobody will use it.

DarkThoughts ,

The only reason people use Firefox is because of an icon in privacy mode? What?

Oisteink ,

Sorry - my bad. Turns out it’s just 1 guy on the forums and theregister that cares.

TachyonTele ,

What browser did your hypothetical dad and nephew switch to?

Oisteink ,

Edge! It’s Firefox but with ai

TachyonTele ,

Ah ok, I didn't realize you were making a joke.

muhyb , to Firefox in Firefox 127's private window handling angers users

Is this a Windows problem I'm too Linux to understand?

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