Lunduke
News • Science & Tech
Mozilla Firefox Goes Anti-Privacy, Pro-Advertising
After buying advertising company, the browser maker goes all-in on data collection.
July 15, 2024
post photo preview

Mozilla is positioning itself as an Advertising and Artificial Intelligence company, and is actively sacrificing the security and privacy of Firefox users to be successful in that business.

Need proof of such an outlandish claim?

Look no further than the recent release of Firefox version 128... and the inclusion of "Privacy-Preserving Attribution".

What in the heck is "Privacy-Preserving Attribution"?

"Hey!  Privacy preserving!  That sounds fantastic!  What's the problem?"

This is, in essence, a bit of functionality -- specifically designed for online advertisers, and websites which implement advertising -- which collects and reports browsing activity back to the advertising companies.

"But it uses the word 'Privacy'!  That means it's private!  And that's good!"

Naming this bit of functionality "Privacy-Preserving Attribution" was a stroke of deceptive genius... as it truly does not preserve privacy.  By design.

This is an example of doublespeak, in line with : "War is Peace", "Freedom is Slavery", and "2 + 2 = 5".

To fully understand the issue, let's look at how "Privacy-Preserving Attribution" works (from a very high level).  Step-by-step.

  1. The Firefox web browser collects your data as you browse a website.
  2. That data is sent to a Mozilla server.
  3. Mozilla then bundles all the data from multiple users together -- into batches -- and sends those batches of data to the servers of advertisers.

Now, in theory, this would allow some of the data being sent to advertisers... to be potentially a bit more private.  Or, at least, slightly obfuscated by having the data of multiple users smashed together.

Unfortunately there are three key problems:

  1. The data being sent to the Mozilla server is neither anonymous, nor private.  Mozilla knows everything.
  2. Mozilla now owns an advertising company.  Mozilla is the advertiser.  Which means Mozilla is sending your private, identifiable data from one of their servers... to another one of their servers.
  3. Even if neither of those two points were true, there is enough data sent -- even in batches -- to reconstruct personal, identifiable information.

As you can see, "Privacy-Preserving Attribution" appears to be custom designed to give the appearance of privacy... without actually providing true privacy.

The Path of Mozilla

Let's put all of this into the context of what has been happening with Mozilla over the last few years.

What can we determine from all of this?

It certainly is obvious -- especially considering the actions over the last few months -- that Mozilla is being driven towards an anti-privacy, pro-AI, pro-Advertising business.

If their recent activities are any indication of their future actions, it seems reasonable to expect more AI and Advertising announcements over the next few months.

Which, for people who use Firefox as a "pro-privacy" browser, may not be welcome news.

community logo
Join the Lunduke Community
To read more articles like this, sign up and join my community today
23
What else you may like…
Videos
Podcasts
Posts
Articles
Proton Mail Apologizes for Sponsoring "Far Right French YouTuber"

Activists on Reddit attacked Proton Mail for advertising with a YouTuber accused of "far-right positioning". Proton quickly caved to the mob and apologized.

Grab a discounted Lifetime Sub & get on the Wall:
https://lunduke.substack.com/p/50-off-yearly-and-massively-discounted

More from The Lunduke Journal:
https://lunduke.com/

00:20:14
Ex Board Member Reveals Corruption & Dysfunction at GNOME Foundation

Unpaid invoices. Threats. Secret bannings of Elected Board Members.
Non-Disparagement Agreements. "Hiding crucial information about staff".

Grab a Discounted Lifetime Subscription & Get on The Wall:
https://lunduke.substack.com/p/50-off-yearly-and-massively-discounted

More from The Lunduke Journal:
https://lunduke.com/

00:26:38
AI Generated Patches to Linux Kernel Hits New Record High

8% of all code submissions to the Linux Kernel are now Al generated.

Grab a discounted Lifetime Sub & get on the Wall:
https://lunduke.substack.com/p/behold-the-win-2k-and-mac-system

More from The Lunduke Journal:
https://lunduke.com/

00:14:24
November 22, 2023
The futility of Ad-Blockers

Ads are filling the entirety of the Web -- websites, podcasts, YouTube videos, etc. -- at an increasing rate. Prices for those ad placements are plummeting. Consumers are desperate to use ad-blockers to make the web palatable. Google (and others) are desperate to break and block ad-blockers. All of which results in... more ads and lower pay for creators.

It's a fascinatingly annoying cycle. And there's only one viable way out of it.

Looking for the Podcast RSS feed or other links? Check here:
https://lunduke.locals.com/post/4619051/lunduke-journal-link-central-tm

Give the gift of The Lunduke Journal:
https://lunduke.locals.com/post/4898317/give-the-gift-of-the-lunduke-journal

The futility of Ad-Blockers
November 21, 2023
openSUSE says "No Lunduke allowed!"

Those in power with openSUSE make it clear they will not allow me anywhere near anything related to the openSUSE project. Ever. For any reason.

Well, that settles that, then! Guess I won't be contributing to openSUSE! 🤣

Looking for the Podcast RSS feed or other links?
https://lunduke.locals.com/post/4619051/lunduke-journal-link-central-tm

Give the gift of The Lunduke Journal:
https://lunduke.locals.com/post/4898317/give-the-gift-of-the-lunduke-journal

openSUSE says "No Lunduke allowed!"
September 13, 2023
"Andreas Kling creator of Serenity OS & Ladybird Web Browser" - Lunduke’s Big Tech Show - September 13th, 2023 - Ep 044

This episode is free for all to enjoy and share.

Be sure to subscribe here at Lunduke.Locals.com to get all shows & articles (including interviews with other amazing nerds).

"Andreas Kling creator of Serenity OS & Ladybird Web Browser" - Lunduke’s Big Tech Show - September 13th, 2023 - Ep 044

RE: Claude Code - "once things reach a certain level of complexity, things seems to fall off the rails."
@JRico @leebase

https://lunduke.locals.com/post/7993219/i-keep-running-hot-and-cold-with-claude-and-claude-code-i-don-t-know-if-my-prompting-skills-are#comments
(I'm not "DevOps" but...) I remember Apple had "Human Interface Guidelines" - and now I've heard about "Self-Similar Patterns" and Fractal Analysis.
My "Theory" is: Do NOT Make Your Code "Anti-Modular" (where layout/design is "inconsistent", each "sub-section" feels like it came from unrelated projects).

Here's Grok giving its "take" on my question (prompt at bottom):

📑
Yes, you're touching on a very insightful point (self-similar, modular code). AI-assisted coding (especially with LLMs) often struggles with increased complexity because it excels at generating individual pieces quickly but tends to produce inconsistent, bloated, or "vibe-coded" solutions when scaling up.

Fractal / Self-Similar Design Principles in Software

Yes, ...

16 hours ago

I keep running hot and cold with Claude and Claude code. I don’t know if my prompting skills are just bad. It is really good at getting the framework of an application started, but once things reach a certain level of complexity, things seems to fall off the rails. AI keeps wanting to make complex code even more complex - even when easier/more straightforward approaches exist. /rewind is my best friend at the moment.

Ultimately, it seems like the more complicated things become, the more you need to understand the code and give AI increasingly detailed and specific instructions. I’m betting at some point in the complexity curve it will be faster to code it myself than to write the prompt.

Although I can’t complain too much, I vibe coded most of the basic features of an app in a weekend that probably would have taken me weeks by hand. Solid first draft.

June 10, 2026

Your experience so far with Fable 5?

post photo preview
TempleOS arrives on The Lunduke Journal Lifetime Wall

“When are you going to add a TempleOS Lifetime Wall??!”

I’ve lost track of the number of times I’ve received that request over the last few weeks. Well. What the heck! Why not?

There are now three Lunduke Journal Lifetime Subscriber Walls (displayed both on Lunduke.com and the end of all new shows) with space available:

  • Macintosh System 1

  • Windows 2000

  • TempleOS

 

A few quick notes:

  1. The Windows 2000 Wall, which was introduced only 2 days ago, is already about half way full. At the current rate, that one will likely be full by the end of the week. Still plenty of space on the Mac System 1 Wall.

  2. The discount on Lifetime Subscriptions ($125… discounted from the normal $300) runs through the end of June.

  3. One Lifetime Subscription = Name Listed on One Wall. These Walls are crazy popular and fill up super fast, so I have to put that limit in place.

  4. Want your name on more than one Lifetime Wall? Grab a second Lifetime Subscription (use the discounted rate) and you can have your name added to one of the Walls with space still available.

Massive high five to everyone who has supported The Lunduke Journal and made these retro-computer Lifetime Walls so much fun to do!

-Lunduke

Read full Article
post photo preview
Behold! The "Win 2K" & "Mac System 1" Lifetime Sub Walls!

Woah! The 8th Lifetime Subscriber Wall of The Lunduke Journal (aka “The Windows 1.0 Wall”) is already full! After only one week! That’s nuts!

So I’m opening up two new, retro computer walls!

  • Wall 9 - “The Macintosh System 1 Wall”

  • Wall 10 - “The Windows 2000 Wall”

 

Show your support for The Lunduke Journal, and be immortalized in a retro computer screenshot. Win-win!

If the past is any indicator, these will fill up crazy fast. First come, first served.

Plus: For the entire month of June, Lifetime Subscriptions are discounted down to $125 (regularly $300).

  1. Scroll down and grab a new Lifetime Subscription (at that bonkers discount).

  2. Choose which of the two new Walls you’d like to be on (Mac System 1 or Windows 2000). Totally optional.

How to Grab a Discounted Lifetime Subscription:

There are 3 different ways to pick up a Lunduke Journal Lifetime sub. All of them work great and include the same perks. Choose whichever works best for you!

Get a Lifetime Subscription via Locals:

  1. Go to Lunduke.Locals.com/support.

  2. Select “Give Once“.

  3. Enter “125“ into the amount field.

  4. After checking out, Lunduke will toss you an email once your account is set to full lifetime status. (This usually happens within a few hours.)

Get a Lifetime Subscription via Substack:

  1. Go to Lunduke.Substack.com/subscribe.

  2. Select the “Lifetime Subscription” option.

  3. After checking out, Lunduke will toss you an email once your account is set to full lifetime status. (This usually happens within a few hours.)

If you would also like full, Lifetime access to Lunduke.Locals.com (which is included):

  1. Make a free account on Lunduke.Locals.com.

  2. Email “bryan at lunduke.com” with the email address you use on both Substack and Locals (can be different email addresses).

  3. Lunduke will toss you an email once your account is set to full lifetime status on Locals.

Get a Lifetime Subscription with Bitcoin:

Bonus: Save an extra $10 with the Bitcoin option, as Bitcoin processing has fewer fees associated with it.

bc1qyjakve8fywm8pz2v99v57yhjj0vzr2vjze6fcq

  • Email “bryan at lunduke.com” with the following information: What time you made the transaction, how much was sent (in Bitcoin), and the email address you use (or plan to use) on Locals.com or Substack.com.

-Lunduke

Read full Article
Windows 1.0 Wall almost full! Last call!

Holy Guacamole, Batman!

The 8th Lifetime Subscriber Wall (“The Windows 1.0 Wall”) of The Lunduke Journal launched exactly one week ago… and it’s already almost full! Bonkers!

 

At the current rate, the “Windows 1.0 Wall” will be full sometime tomorrow (Saturday).

Want your name immortalized in that glorious 1985 styled goodness, proclaiming to the world your support of The Lunduke Journal?

Don’t have a Lifetime Subscription?

  1. Grab one for $125 (normally $300).

  2. You’ll get a confirmation email (within just a few hours). Reply to that email with how you would like your name displayed on a Lifetime Wall.

  3. Then enjoy the other perks of being Lunduke Journal subscriber. Forum access, MP4 downloads, and PDF eBooks.

Already have a Lifetime Subscription?

  1. Just toss an email to bryan [at] lunduke.com with how you would like your name displayed on a Lifetime Wall.

Easy peasy.

First come, first served. Once the “Windows 1.0 Wall” is full, the final version will be added to Lunduke.com and the 9th Lifetime Wall will debut!

-Lunduke

Read full Article
See More
Available on mobile and TV devices
google store google store app store app store
google store google store app tv store app tv store amazon store amazon store roku store roku store
Powered by Locals