Thought this was interesting and worth knowing about

  • barnaclebutt
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    602 months ago

    Who is the moron at Mozilla that thought it would be a good idea to sell user information, and how much does he make a year?

  • @Zerush@lemmy.ml
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    2 months ago

    Thunderbird May Disclose Information To: Mozilla Affiliates: Thunderbird is a project of MZLA Technologies Corporation, a subsidiary of Mozilla Foundation and an affiliate of Mozilla Corporation, and as such, shares some of the same infrastructure. This means that, from time to time, your data (e.g., crash reports, and technical and interaction data) may be** disclosed to Mozilla Corporation and Mozilla Foundation**. If so, it will be maintained in accordance with the commitments we make in this Privacy Notice.

    DNS servers, Standard Autoconfiguration URIs, and Mozilla’s Configuration Database: To simplify the email set-up process, Thunderbird tries to determine the correct settings for your account by contacting Mozilla’s configuration database as well as external servers. These include DNS servers and standard autoconfiguration URIs. During this process, your email domain may be sent to Mozilla’s configuration database, and your email address may be disclosed to your network administrators.

    Amazon Web Services: Thunderbird uses Amazon Web Services (AWS) to host its servers and as a content delivery network. Your device’s IP address is collected as part of AWS’s server logs.

    Email address providers (Desktop Only Legacy): Prior to version 128, Thunderbird partnered with Gandi.net and Mailfence to allow you to create a new email address through Thunderbird. If you choose to use this feature, your email address search terms are sent to Gandi.net and Mailfence to return available addresses. In addition, your country location is also shared to provide the correct prices. You can learn more about Gandi.net’s and Mailfence’s data practices by reading their privacy notices.

    Always good to read TOS and PP of an service.

    • The Octonaut
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      122 months ago

      I’m always confused when people are surprised by something like an account sync meaning that the operators have to store your data

      Makes me wonder if they understand how Lemmy works…

      • @Zerush@lemmy.ml
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        12 months ago

        Yes, naturally to create an account for Sync, they have to store your data. But it’s not the same if they also share these with third parties.

        • The Octonaut
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          12 months ago

          If third parties means AWS, then every website you’ve accessed this year shares your data with third parties. This is why the GDPR exists.

          • @Legume5534@lemm.ee
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            12 months ago

            Depends. Every hostname accessed? Sure. Every full URL? Not with https being everywhere these days.

          • @Zerush@lemmy.ml
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            2 months ago

            Yes, but this is a different thing. It’s clear that you are not private, even using TOR, if you use Google for search, post on Fakebook or use another page/service which logs and profile your activity, but it’s different if the browser itself or/and its company is tracking you, sharing it with third parties. That is the point. GDPR limit this to an minimum, but don’t avoid it completely. More than ever is important that you ALWAYS read TOS and PP of every app/service before using it. A good rule is: longer and more written in a legal jargon, difficult to understand and many external links, it is a sign that the app or service is trying to hide its activities and dark patterns by boring the user. A honest app/service don’t need this tricks, using a short and clear text.

            • The Octonaut
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              12 months ago

              Are you under the impression that what you quoted is a long or unclear text?

              • @Zerush@lemmy.ml
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                12 months ago

                That of Mozilla is enough clear, although not much better with several external links that must be checked separately. But in general it is a fairly valid rule that the site has things to hide if it puts a very long legal text. A normal user does not bother to read a text of 2 or more pages in a difficulty legal jargon.

                Honest sides don’t need to do it, good examples are the PPs of the SSuite (the shortest ever) or Andisearch, which are between the bests I know.

      • @Zerush@lemmy.ml
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        -82 months ago

        The Vivaldi browser has an inbuild Mail client, which share nothing to third parties. Vivaldi is complete independent from third party investors and share nothing with other companies.

    • a Kendrick fan
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      12 months ago

      your network administrators

      What does network administrators mean in this context? Your ISP?

  • CrisOP
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    182 months ago

    Wasn’t sure if there were better places to post this, feel free to cross-post if you know other fitting communities :)

  • @warmaster@lemmy.world
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    142 months ago

    lol, what a shitshow. A product from the same company is distancing from the stench. Good on them, but it shows who did some things wrong.

    • Engywook
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      102 months ago

      If I remember correctly, Thunderbird isn’t a Mozilla product anymore but it’s maintained by the community. Mozilla just hosts it.

      • @jollyrogue@lemmy.ml
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        42 months ago

        It was community maintained, then MZLA Corp was formed under the Mozilla Foundation. Deals to house Thunderbird under other foundations fell through, which is why it’s still under the Mozilla Foundation.

    • Ephera
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      22 months ago

      It’s a different piece of software. It makes no sense for them to adopt the Firefox Terms of Use, no matter how they might think of them.

  • Pyr
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    102 months ago

    I mean, for now…

    If terms of use aren’t regulated in any way apparently companies can change them whenever they fucking want to.

    They can say this today and then a month from now completely backtrack just like Mozilla did…

    Terms of use do not mean fucking anything.

    • @dai@lemmy.world
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      32 months ago

      Creating a browser from scratch is a monumental task, ladybird is such a project which has been in progress since ~2022, and will probably take another couple before it’s at beta. Optimistic release is 2028, or ~6 years of development.

      I’ve moved to schizofox (NixOS) but there are plenty of other forks available which remove telemetry and other default behaviours from Firefox.

      Chromium forks are another alternative however due to chromiums dominance in the browser space I’m reluctant to shoutout any forks.

    • Dizzy Devil Ducky
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      12 months ago

      Only other alternatives I know are either Safari if you’re on an apple device or something like Links/Links2/Lynx if you don’t mind text based browsers. Neither are convenient for their own reasons, but it’s not like we have any other choices. At least not that I’m aware of.

  • NONE
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    42 months ago

    Great! I’m very happy with Thunderbird and with all this Mozilla nonsense i was worry that I had to leave it.

    • CrisOP
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      102 months ago

      Thunderbird actually had a big resurgence a little while back, I use it as my mobile client 🤷‍♂️ If I understand correctly it’s not actually a directly Mozilla project anymore.

      Personally I’m less bothered by the terms of use changes specifically than the bigger picture of mozilla consistently making choices that confuse or raise eyebrows with their core audience, letting their browser languish from a technical standpoint, and making confusing business choices that don’t seem to help their financial future at all while paying executives huge salaries

      • a Kendrick fan
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        52 months ago

        I use it as my mobile client 🤷‍♂️

        Same here and I’m glad you posted this info

    • Kilgore Trout
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      62 months ago

      No one uses Thunderbird anymore

      You pulled this out of your ass?

      Thunderbird currently has millions of users.