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Mozilla Firefox Goes Anti-Privacy, Pro-Advertising
After buying advertising company, the browser maker goes all-in on data collection.
July 15, 2024
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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.

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

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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
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The main difference between chatting with ChatGPT/Claude and AI agents - is that agents can act.

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Whew! It’s been another wild week for Tech News!

Here’s a crazy stat for ya:

We are currently 16 days into 2026, and The Lunduke Journal has already recorded 19 shows (17 of which have been published on every platform, and 2 others to be published this weekend everywhere… but are already available via the MP4 download page). And that’s with taking New Year’s Day off (and getting the flu this week).

It’s a heck of a lot of Tech News, to be sure.

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If you only have time to watch a few of shows, I recommend these 3 as being the most interesting (or important… or just… strange) from the last week:

In other words: A pretty gosh-darned crazy week for Linux.

(Those links are to Lunduke.Substack.com, but you can watch all of those shows on any other platform. As always.)

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Lunduke's Lifetime Subscriber Wall 3 is almost full!

Holy moly.

This afternoon I sat down to update the 3rd Lunduke Journal Lifetime Subscriber wall — adding in all of you who sent in requests over the last week or so.

And, boy howdy, were there a lot of you! So many, in fact, that the 3rd Lifetime Wall only has room for around 6 or 7 more names (depending on the name lengths)! That’s crazy!

If you want to make it onto “The Lunduke Journal Lifetime Subscriber” Wall number 3… send me an email (bryan at lunduke.com) with the way you would like your name to be displayed.

Or, if you’re not already a Lifetime Subscriber, remedy that for $89. (Which, you know, is a pretty gosh darned good value.) … Then send me that email requesting to be added to the wall.

Once Wall 3 is full, we’ll start in on Wall number 4 (that’s nuts). At the current rate, I expect Wall 4 to debut this week.

And, as always, thank you for your support. Whatever kind of subscription you have, it is deeply appreciated. Monthly, Yearly, or Lifetime. All are amazing. You make The Lunduke Journal possible.

You rule.

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I’ve got the flu (or something else yucky) and need to take the day off tomorrow.

But I don’t really have a normal “boss” to email. Heck, all of you are sort of like my collective boss.

So I’m emailing you:

Boss, *cough cough* Lunduke is out sick tomorrow.

Which means no new shows on Wednesday. Hoping to rest up and be back with new shows on Thursday.

If you’ve missed any shows over the last few weeks, now’s a good chance to catch up.

And feel free to grab one of those fancy-shmancy $89 Lifetime Subscriptions while you’re at it. That won’t make my flu go away any faster… but it definitely won’t hurt.

Unrelated note: Buying stock in Nyquil might not be a bad idea. I think I’m about to increase their profits.

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