The Google antitrust ruling could be an existential threat to the future of Firefox | Financials show 86% of Mozilla's revenue came from the agreement keeping Google as Firefox's default search engine

submitted a month ago by ForgottenFlux

www.techspot.com/news/104150-mozilla-doomed-suf…

Mozilla has a close relationship with Google, as most of Firefox's revenue comes from the agreement keeping Google as the browser's default search engine. However, the search giant is now officially a monopoly, and a future court decision could have an unprecedented impact on Mozilla's ability to keep things "business as usual."

United States District Judge Amit Mehta found Google guilty of building a monopolistic position in web search. The Mountain View corporation spent billions of dollars becoming the leading search provider for computing platforms and web browsers on PC and mobile devices.

Most of the $21 billion spent went to Apple in exchange for setting Google as the default search engine on iPhone, iPad, and Mac systems. The judge will now need to decide on a penalty for the company's actions, including the potential of forcing Google to stop payments to its search "partners completely," which could have dire consequences for smaller companies like Mozilla.

Its most recent financials show Mozilla gets $510 million out of its $593 million in total revenue from its Google partnership. This precarious financial position is a side effect of its deal with Alphabet, which made Google the search engine default for newer Firefox installations.

The open-source web browser has experienced a steady market share decline over the past few years. Meanwhile, Mozilla management was paid millions to develop a new "vision" of a theoretical future with AI chatbots. Mozilla Corporation, the wholly owned subsidiary of Mozilla Foundation managing Firefox development, could find itself in a severe struggle for revenue if Google's money suddenly dried up.

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Lampshade a month ago, edited a month ago

Based on their 2022 report, only half of their expenses were on software development costs - around $220m, and it’s not clear what portion of that was on Firefox vs other projects.

https://assets.mozilla.net/annualreport/2022/mozilla-fdn-2022-fs-final-0908.pdf

In terms of revenue: around $100m was from sources other than Google.

Therefore, it seems plausible to me that Firefox development could still be funded with $100m of annual revenue. At a smaller level no doubt, but still in existence nonetheless.

unexposedhazard a month ago, edited a month ago

This is the way. Mozilla is bloated to fuck as a company. They need to be forced to get back on their main goal: Building a fucking Browser.

No ad deals, no stupid cloud features, just actual browser and privacy features.

There is no fucking way all that money is actually being spent on maintaining core firefox functionality.

merc a month ago

Mozilla is bloated to fuck as a company

On one hand, I think people underestimate how difficult it is to build a cross-platform browser in 2024. Just think about all the things that you now do through a web browser that used to require their own separate programs. A browser has to act as the UI for a word processor, a spreadsheet, online games, banking apps, etc. And, it has to work on multiple operating systems with different screen sizes etc. And, this is with constantly evolving web standards. Those web standards are things that Mozilla / Firefox has to participate in too, otherwise Google (the only other browser manufacturer) is going to steer them however it wants and do things like make ad-blocking impossible.

On the other hand, I completely agree that every sign points to Mozilla being ridiculously bloated. Being gifted half a billion dollars per year no matter what you do (as long as it doesn't displease Google) is going to lead to massive inefficiencies. The CEO's salary is an obvious red flag. But, it's a lot more than that. Why did Mozilla buy an advertising company? Why did they buy Pocket? Why are they getting into AI? Why do they sell VPN subscriptions?

Also, what's up with this weird structure where a non-profit (Mozilla Foundation) owns a for-profit (Mozilla Corporation). How can that not be a conflict of interest? I understand that there are some things that non-profits can't do. But, why don't they have two separate companies and have the for-profit one pledge to donate X% of profits or revenues to the non-profit?

It would be a bad thing if the result of the money spigot being turned off is that it was no longer possible to pay people to work on Firefox, resulting in Chrome being the one and only browser. On the other hand, it really does seem like Mozilla needs to be slimmed down and focused on a core mission of making an open source web browser (and hopefully their email client Thunderbird too).

Dojan a month ago

Given that they are focusing on initiatives like intrusive adverts and machine learning BS, I'm okay with them cutting that kind of nonsense off; Firefox *still* doesn't have a native vertical tab bar.

dan a month ago, edited a month ago

Firefox *still* doesn't have a native vertical tab bar.

At least the extension APIs are powerful enough to have an extension that does a decent job (or even a great job, in the case of extensions like Sidebery), plus there's a way to hide the regular top tabs. That's not the case with Chrome - all the Chrome vertical tab extensions feel kinda janky and the regular top tabs are still visible.

You could also use a Firefox fork like Floorp that has native support for tree-style tabs.

egerlach a month ago

Firefox *still* doesn't have a native vertical tab bar.

That is only *mostly* true now. There is an about:config setting you can turn on in FF 129 (released this week) which will let you have native vertical tabs. The implementation is only about half done, but it's good enough for me to use alongside Sidebery Tabs.

You can track progress on vertical tabs in Bugzilla. They are also working on tab groups, but that work is at an earlier stage.

All in all, I think we'll see vertical tabs in the next 6 months or so? As a devout Firefox user and resister of the Chromium monopoly, I am really excited.

Excrubulent a month ago, edited a month ago

Why have I never considered vertical tabs before? The screen is way too wide for normal pages, you can fit a bunch more information sideways per tab, and way more tabs vertically than horizontally. You could even double-stack them with all the space available.

This is such an obvious change to make.

Dojan a month ago

That is only mostly true now. There is an about:config setting you can turn on in FF 129 (released this week)

That's also the one with the intrusive, facebook-endorsed, opt-in advertising system, isn't it? I use LibreWolf, because Mozilla doesn't truly care for privacy.

mke a month ago

Hey, I think it's possible you're misunderstanding how the system you're referring to works, as well as its purpose. It's happened a lot.

I'd like to try to help by answering any questions I can and clarifying things, if you're willing to talk.

YurkshireLad a month ago

And their bookmark manager on android is absolute crap.

Vanon a month ago

Agreed. A real PITA to organize, some unintuitive and hidden options, but very basic. I've used sync and organized on desktop. (But now I do NOT sync desktop bookmarks at all, it has messed them up too many times.)

Not a huge problem, but annoying. Like some newer non-removable toolbar buttons on desktop. Lack of JXL support. I'm a huge Firefox and Mozilla fan, used non-stop for years, but it has annoyances. The team also used to quickly cater to user feedback, but that seems to have slowed.

kokofruits_1 a month ago

The translation tool is pretty good though

mke a month ago, edited a month ago

Local translations, heck yeah! I know it's not the case for everyone, but I'll even take worse translations in the short-term if it means being able to ditch google and friends.

Kecessa a month ago

And profiles work like shit, at least they announced they were gonna get to it...

uranibaba a month ago

Firefox still doesn’t have a native vertical tab bar.

What's up with everyone obsessing this? I tried Floorp and vertical worse.

Dojan a month ago

I have an ultrawide. Vertical works a lot better on ultrawide than on more narrow screen ratios. Though ultimately it's just a matter of preference. I personally dislike dark mode.

uranibaba a month ago

I only use a laptop, having vertical took too much screen real estate.

Dojan a month ago

Yeah I can see that. My work computer is a laptop, with an ultra wide external monitor. I never use the browser on the laptop screen because with vertical tabs it just takes up too much space. Otherwise vertical tabs give you an easy overview of what you have open if you like me tend to leave a tonne of tabs up.

dan a month ago

Coincidentally, I just saw this article: https://www.howtogeek.com/mozilla-firefox-vertical-tabs-test/

Bluefruit a month ago

While I do want competition in the web space, its a good thing that Google could get told to stop doing stuff like this.

I dont want Mozilla to die of course but companies need to be held responsible for all the shit they pull. I'd imagine if Mozilla wasnt able to maintain firefox anymore it would fall to the open source community like they said in the article and I'd probably still use it.

No one company should own the internet.

floofloof a month ago

Who in the open-source community would pay what it costs to develop Firefox? I hope some organization would, but it's a huge and expensive project to run.

brucethemoose a month ago, edited a month ago

In before Meta buys Mozilla, lol.

Zuckerberg is on a "spoiling other tech giants with Facebook money" streak.

zkfcfbzr a month ago

Oh hey, you managed to think up the one scenario that would make me abandon Firefox

Bluefruit a month ago

Great question that I dont have an answer for. Maybe one of the foundations that supports Linux development? This is just my hope though. No idea what it would really take to maintain Firefox at this point. Maybe if it was scaled down or something it'd be ok in the hands of just the open source community as a whole but I'm not well versed in programming or development so i dont know.

I gotta try and be optimistic about this kinda stuff because i forsee a future where Google just ruins more and more of the internet and i hate the thought of that.

MCasq_qsaCJ_234 a month ago

Servo is now being looked after by the Linux Foundation in Europe, but is only maintained by volunteers. But another project has arrived that is not based on Chromium, Webkit or Firefox, which may be a hope in this somewhat confusing situation.

bufalo1973 a month ago

I'm thinking of governments using it and helping. They could have their computers running without Google sticking its nose.

Kecessa a month ago, edited a month ago

Not all their revenues come from Google and other sources are enough to cover Firefox development... But that would mean giving up on all the useless shit no one asked for they're working on...

Emily (she/her) a month ago

Mozilla's next largest source of revenue is subscriptions and advertising (source 2021 financial report), by a wide margin. That "useless shit" *is* their other revenue, and they're investing in it because they know they need to diversify revenue to fund Firefox. You're suggesting they kill it because it's not their core (unprofitable) business?

ShepherdPie a month ago

I wonder if this ruling over search engines could spook them with browser development as well considering they nearly have a monopoly with chromium too. Perhaps they'll release control of it and stop pushing anti-consumer updates like removing your ability to block ads.

OldWoodFrame a month ago

On the other hand, might also be good for Firefox to not be 86% funded by the maker of its top rival (Chrome).

Johnmannesca a month ago

Right? Great knowing there wouldn't be an adblock killswitch waiting for us all like the sword of damocles

LouNeko a month ago

I would stand behind the idea of splitting Google in it's seperate branches with no shared assets. Basically Google search becomes is seperate corporation, Google AI, Google Webservices, Google Ad Services, YouTube. etc.. This will hopefully undo some of the webs enshitification since now the essentially most powerful company on the web has to actually offer good product for profit instead of compensating bad product with more profitable one.

BrightCandle a month ago

That doesn't produce any practical competition however. Some vertical splitting of the search business seems reasonable so we end up with multiple companies doing search out of it.

BradleyUffner a month ago

How exactly would you break up search? You can't really do it geographically like the Bells.

Obi a month ago

If if wasn't American, I'd say nationalise it. Maybe at some point we'll need some kind of international version of nationalising.

wanderingmagus a month ago

Have a UN agency run it?

jakob22 a month ago

In a perfect world

Omniraptor a month ago

played a neat game that's basically a choose your own adventure where you play as president Bernie Sanders. It has this as a possible thing to do.

https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.molleindustria.demsocsim

nomadjoanne a month ago

Ah yes, cos that would lead to stellar leadership in Mozilla.

erwan a month ago

Good, Baker can go find an other x millions salary elsewhere because it's necessary for her family (as she said in an interview), and Firefox can become a community project again that still pays salary to actual developers but without the expensive bullshitting C-suite.

bighi a month ago, edited a month ago

Mozilla gotta do something.

And based on their actions on recent years, that something is probably going to be: 1) firing more developers, and 2) increasing the compensation of their CEO.

zaphod a month ago

I'll add:

3) Buying some random companies

SirEDCaLot a month ago
  1. Change the UI and mess with plugins.
  2. More bloat in the install package that should be optional plugins.
Sabata a month ago
  1. Offer advertisers user data.
SirEDCaLot a month ago

(for absurdly small amounts of money)

Rob T Firefly a month ago

Also forcing in AI somehow.

SamB a month ago

It’s strange how the Internet has been flooded by this news. Like leave Google alone or Firefox gets it. Very strategic use of the media might I say.

This article doesn't even bother to explain the connection. I don't get it if I'm honest.

WldFyre a month ago

Its most recent financials show Mozilla gets $510 million out of its $593 million in total revenue from its Google partnership.

Obviously. Why is that threatened by this antitrust ruling ?

WldFyre a month ago

United States District Judge Amit Mehta found Google guilty of building a monopolistic position in web search. The Mountain View corporation spent billions of dollars becoming the leading search provider for computing platforms and web browsers on PC and mobile devices

JackbyDev a month ago

Wtf, no? It's saying "Hey, it's great that you're angry about Google search being a monopoly, but you need to be aware and ready that this ruling could further cement their browser monopoly."

cmysmiaczxotoy a month ago

I needed, I would pay $5 per month in perpetuity for access to Firefox. Fuck google

cybersandwich a month ago

There are dozens of us!!

LoKout a month ago

At least 2, at the moment.

stoly a month ago

Three

ThePancake a month ago

Four.. maybe even $10/mo after the manifest v3 chaos hits in full force.

MadBigote a month ago

Exchange rate is a bitch, but id chime in and do my part as well.

kakito69 a month ago

You’d need a hundred million people sign up for that $5 subscription to make up for Google’s bribe.

deleteme a month ago

Your math is off. It would take 8.5 million people donating $5 a month, to equal the 510 million a year from Google.

My math (please correct me if I am wrong):

$510 million / 1 year

$ X / 1 month?

$510 million / 12 months = $42.5 million / 1 month 

$42.5 million / $5 per person a month = 8.5 million people a month

kakito69 a month ago

You’re right. My European ass sees revenue and salaries as monthly

merc a month ago

Also, Mozilla says that it spends only $220M on software development expenses, so if 100% of the money went to that it would only require 3.7 million people paying $5 per month.

But, IMO, if the Google money spigot is turned off, it might be that other companies that rely on web browsers (Apple, Amazon, Netflix, Microsoft, etc.) will want to spend at least a few tens of millions on Firefox. That would mean that end-users wouldn't need to support the entire cost of developing it.

Right now, everyone except Apple uses Blink which is a Google project tied to Chrome. Since Google has been found to have been illegally abusing their monopoly, the status of Chromium / Blink has to be uncertain. It would be smart insurance for these companies to ensure that Firefox doesn't go away in case something happens to Blink.

Yup, and I could do $5/month, perhaps more if they really seemed to need it. I don't know if there are 8-9M, but maybe.

They really should be working on improving their revenue streams. I think they should work on privacy-friendly transactions, like a Mozilla Pay where I put money into some kind of bucket, then purchases are paid out of that bucket. The system would work on something like GNU Taler, and they'd take a small cut for money going into and out of the system (or transactions within the system). I could use those funds to pay for online services, avoiding ads, tips to people online, or Mozilla services.

uranibaba a month ago, edited a month ago

Is it not

5 x 12 = 60

$510 000 000 / $60 = 850 000

$60 is one year of subscription for if user.

850 000 users need to pay 60 dollar per year to amount to $510 000 000.

(Or 510 000 000/5 = 10 200 000 users per month to reach the same amount monthly.)

theherk a month ago

510 / 60 = 8.5

uranibaba a month ago

I see that I missed a zero (510000000/60=8 500 000). That numbers didn't seem plausible when I did the calculation.

You mean 510 million divided by 12. That's "only" 42.5.

Affidavit a month ago

I wonder how much of their income actually goes towards development. At a glance, it seems a great deal of unnecessary administrative bloat has been added to Mozilla.

I honestly don't see why a browser company needs to be so large (>700 employees).

Not that I want people to lose their jobs, it just seems unnecessary.

SkyeStarfall a month ago

Well, a browser is a massive piece of software, especially if you include the development of a render engine as Firefox does

Web standards evolve constantly, you need to keep up somehow, together with optimizations, bug fixing, patching of security vulnerabilities, etc

TheGrandNagus a month ago

Indeed. People severely underestimate how complex and costly developing a browser and web renderer is.

In many ways it's far more complex than OS development.

Firefox cannot get by on user donations alone. Mozilla needs a way to generate revenue, but nobody wants Mozilla to commercialise in any way. They're stuck between a rock and a hard place.

mke a month ago

And a JS engine! Firefox uses Mozilla's SpiderMonkey, unlike every other (Blink/chrome-family) browser which uses Google's V8.

stoly a month ago

They do more. They are also a vpn, and they are standing up new services.

barsoap a month ago

Mozilla is not a browser producer, it's a general internet charity that earns money by producing a browser. Most of their income goes to charity and reserves of which they have about 1bn -- roughly four times as much as wikipedia just for a sense of scale, wikipedia doesn't do any business deals to get at cash but instead does annoying donation drives.

They could scale down *significantly* while still keeping firefox development ongoing, they probably wouldn't have much issue finding enough donations to fund development, but the strategy seems to be building reserves and diversify commercial income, things like the revenue share they get from pocket for sending people to ad-ridden pages.

When you're currently donating to Mozilla you're not donating towards Firefox: Mozilla-the-company can't receive funds from Mozilla-the-foundation, those donations are going to charity work.


And, to make this clear: None of this is a grand revelation, or new, or outrageous, it's basically *always* been like that and it's always been a perfectly proper way to run a charity. Most of the recent pushbacks comes from people hating that Mozilla funds stuff like getting women into STEM, being outraged that the wider Mozilla community is not keen on having a CEO which opposes gay marriage (very staunchly so), etc.

mke a month ago

Oh my, could you share more information about the homophobic CEO thing?

barsoap a month ago, edited a month ago

Search for Brendan Eich, nowadays he's running the Brave browser.

mke a month ago

Oh, him. Thanks.

nowadays he's running the Brave browser.

Yeah, that's what I knew him from. Figures he would go on to lead a browser infamous for its controversies.

There's a reason why every other browser maker has given up and adopted Chromium. It's not easy to support a browser and rendering engine across half a dozen OSes while keeping it secure, performant and stable.

katy ✨ a month ago

if you only do a monthly donation of $5 a month that's still $60 a year and i urge you do do it. i have a recurring donation for firefox, thunderbird, and wikipedia because i believe they're essential to the internet.

BelatedPeacock a month ago

Mozilla doesn't use their donations for Firefox, though that might change if they lose the Google money.

800XL a month ago

don't forget archive.org!

WhatAmLemmy a month ago

I will not donate anything to Firefox until Mozilla guarantees my money will be spent on Firefox.

But yeah wikipedia, archive.org, etc. Give them your money.

rickyrigatoni a month ago

mozilla donations not going to firefox was probably the caveat to secure google's funding. If google has to pull their bribes, mozilla might make donations go to firefox.

Or I could be completely wrong. We won't know until we know.

Yeah, I'll donate to Mozilla the moment they actually apply my donations to Firefox. I'm not going to pay for them to buy ad companies, donate to other charities, or put on charity events. I honestly just want to fund Firefox development.

That said, I'm okay with not 100% of it going to Firefox, as long as the bulk of it does. I understand there's a lot of admin overhead they need to cover and whatnot, and I'm fine with my money going to that. But it seems most donations don't make it to Firefox dev.

Todd Bonzalez a month ago

i have a recurring donation for firefox, thunderbird, and wikipedia

So to Mozilla and the Wikimedia Foundation?

(weird that you list Firefox and Thunderbird as separate donations)

umbrella a month ago

quite a good chunk of that goes to their ceo anyway.

vanderbilt a month ago

I am livid over her absolutely disgraceful management over Moz. When electron was building a de facto monopoly of Chromium on the desktop she made no moves to produces equivalent tooling. While Node grew into a behemoth she totally ignored it. The only thing that has come out of Moz in the last decade that mattered was Rust, and she’s already fired the Rust team. She is poison and serves only to suck up a salary that could fund development.

Mozilla needs its wake up call and to start being the underdog that makes something worth doing. With Manifest V3 and the anti-trust case on the horizon they have a fork in the road that will define what becomes of them. Hopefully she can make one good decision and it’ll be the right one.

umbrella a month ago

thats ceos for ya.

i doubt they will escape from going through some bad times.

The Hobbyist a month ago, edited a month ago

I can very much imagine this being a short to medium term issue (and still an existential threat to Mozilla), but hopefully, this improves the situation to the point that there is no future company like google who artificially maintains control over browsers and search engines, rendering competitors dependent on these massive contracts? I mean, this is what got them there, right?

Lvxferre a month ago

Even if Mozilla survives it'll need to cut off some spendings.

toasteecup a month ago

I would pay money to keep Firefox foss for other people who can't afford to do so.

KingOfTheCouch a month ago

BreakThemUp

Buddahriffic a month ago

Specifically separate the browser side from the advertiser side. Get rid of that conflict of interest.

Lets_Eat_Grandma a month ago, edited a month ago

This isn't a new threat. This was always a threat.

The things that give google money are the reasons why we don't want to use google. The things that firefox does to get money are basically just giving google the thing that makes them money.

zecg a month ago

I use only Firefox / Fennec, but fuck Mozilla. The obscene amounts they paid their CEO for stupid decisions, their shitty Pocket acquisition, regressions such as saving page as pdf simply disappearing on mobile. Let that rotten corporation die, the code is open source, someone will do a Gecko browser.

Supermariofan67 a month ago

I don't think it's quite as simple as someone just forking it. Realistically, a browser is an extremely complex piece of software that requires a lot of organizational effort to maintain, deal with security issues, etc. Pretty much every other piece of software on a similar scale I can think of (the kernel, KDE, Blender, Libreoffice) has some sort of organization behind it with at least some amount of officially paid work. All the major forks of Firefox or chromium follow quite closely to upstream for this reason (which is also why I'm skeptical of Brave's ability to maintain manifest v2 long term, despite their probably genuine best efforts to do so).

I do wish that Firefox were developed and funded by an organization specifically dedicated to developing it. This could of course happen if Mozilla dies. But that's going to require someone starting it, which is not at all a small or cheap task.

I could also see a future where Oracle or IBM buys it 😂🤡

Tja a month ago

Firefox enterprise edition, now with Lotus integration!

TheJack a month ago, edited a month ago

I have written this elsewhere many times and I know it's extremely unpopular with FOSS crowd but truth needs to be told in here once again:

Everyday I use Debian, Ubuntu and Windows 10/11/Servers.

I'm an "IT guy" and have installed Firefox on literally hundreds of computers over a decade. I also install and setup extensions like uBlock Origin (with few comprehensive ad & malware blocking lists) , Dark Reader, Auto Delete Cookies, Crypto blocking and many more... but I have given up on Firefox 2016 onwards.

You could give Mozilla 10 billion per year just to develop Firefox but Mozilla can and will decide that they wanna spend only 1 or 10 percent of that money on actual Firefox development.

They will spend most of their money on anything but Firefox.

I mean I love world-peace, and cancer and aids free world too but with the money Mozilla get in a year, none of that gonna happen.

Mozilla couldn't stop Russia attack on Ukraine; neither were able to solve Israel Palestinian conflict nor hunger and migration from African countries to Europe...

Then what are they spending money on?

What they could have done successfully is to spend all the money they made from Firefox towards Firefox development alone. But this is the thing Mozilla do not want to do and are open about it.

Now I don't want Mozilla to stop developing Firefox either but because Firefox needs money from Google, Google must be allowed their monopoly on search... is utterly insane thinking.

If Mozilla cannot survive without Google monopoly, so be it.

I would say some open source/ Linux foundations/ Linux distros needs to fork Firefox and let Mozilla die peacefully.

Justin a month ago

Servo is working on becoming a standalone browser.

mke a month ago

I'm sorry, I don't think that's entirely correct:

Servo aims to provide an independent, modular, embeddable web rendering engine source - About Servo

I think it'd be better to say they're working on becoming a modern, easy to use alternative to the likes of Gecko and Blink, the engines powering Firefox and Chrome, respectively.

I saw nothing about plans to become a fully featured web browser, even in the roadmap. Do you have anything else to share that supports the browser idea?

systemglitch a month ago

What improvements would you like to see through development?

TheJack a month ago

Semi-TLDR: Improvements under Mozilla? None.

They do not even want to develop a better (than Chrome) browser... they wanna "build a better Internet".

Mozilla Foundation is making US$ 300-400 millions for many, many years (US$ 593 in 2021-22). If they could not develop a better Firefox all these years, it's not happening _ with or without Google money _ ever.

When Mozilla /Firefox developers don't even care/do not listen to feedback for simple things like ability to differentiate between active and inactive tab colors (why everyone that uses Firefox must play around with css to make Firefox usable?), expect them to develop something better or comparable to Chromium based browser is out of question.

Longer, rant version:

According to the Mozilla Foundation’s 2021–2022 financial statement, which is the most recent one published, $510 million out of its $593 million in revenue came courtesy of Google’s search payments.

Source: https://fortune.com/2024/08/05/mozilla-firefox-biggest-potential-loser-google-antitrust-search-ruling/

The fundamental issues as I see are:

Complete lack of vision. Utterly worthless CEOs. Spending money on everything else but development of Firefox.

Especially when Firefox made them US$ 510 million in 2021-22.

Instead of spending millions on worthless CEOs, why not spend millions on developers so people would use Firefox on their own, instead IT guys like me forcing friends & family to use it.

I try to find annual cost of developing & maintaining Linux kernel but could only find articles and PDFs from 2008/2017 mentioning total worth etc but not actual annual cost.

Just as a thought experiment, imagine every Firefox (desktop, mobile etc) stops working all of a sudden... IMO, the world and internet will not come to a full stop.

Now imagine what would happen if every computer, server, router, switch, phone, tablet, stops working completely at once, that runs on Linux kernel.

So if Linux kernel can be developed for $510 million (assuming its below this mark), why can't Firefox be?

I'm trying to figure out why US$ 510 million is not able to develop something better or comparable to Chromium based browsers.

Then there are issues related to lack of vision and no importance/urgency towards finishing a product.

Why only few extensions were allowed on Firefox mobile for many years without any explanations. Even developers of major extensions were not able to figure out the criteria to make their addon available on Firefox mobile.

What was the rationale behind it... Driving people away who were using Firefox mobile? If the product was not ready, do not fucking release it.

You need highly talented and additional developers to release product sooner... hire more, pay more. You got $510 mil just from Firefox.

I do not see any future for Firefox under Mozilla.

Only if some real big names (like Linux foundation etc) from FOSS world hard fork the Firefox, it might have a future.

I think, with real big name sponsors (pro-open source companies), search revenue will not be an issue.

IMO, the new organization (of course with big sponsors) of new fork must have one, single mission/goal... develop a great browser. New org must not have a mission statement written by MBAs:

"We’re building a better Internet"

Source: https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/mission/

Something people will use it on their own for its merit.

Aatube a month ago

I'm going to go eat now, so I'll just respond to the short version:

Yes, the CEO is overpaid, but I do not get you at all.

active and inactive tab colors

The colors are perfectly distinguishable? Whatever's active has a giant white background and border and shadow.

expect them to develop something better or comparable to Chromium based browser is out of question.

It's already better than Chromium. For example, not only is it a bit less resource-heavy, it also has features that allow uBlock Origin to function much better even before all the Mv3 stuff.

TheJack a month ago

Regarding tab colors, I'll post screenshot from my Debian machine later tomorrow.

If something is better (or at least perceived as better) people will use it on their own. Default or not.

Examples: VLC player. Microsoft Office

Even if LibreOffice is free, why people are paying for Microsoft Office?

I have to spend 10 times more time on LibreOffice on Debian/Ubuntu than on Microsoft Office on Windows. Same with simple touch ups in GIMP vs Microsoft Paint.

Firefox market share in 2024: 3.36%

Source: https://backlinko.com/browser-market-share

Aatube a month ago, edited a month ago

If something is better (or at least perceived as better) people will use it on their own. Default or not.

Wait until you learn about how monopolies work.

Most people are lazy. They don't switch until some major thing happens. VLC doesn't even have as much market share as you think it has; most people just use whatever comes with their system.

MCasq_qsaCJ_234 a month ago

There is already the Ladybird project, which is a fork of the SerenityOS browser. We can say that it is a spiritual successor, although its license is more permissive than the Firefox browser.

greywolf0x1 a month ago

I think Servo, not the Ladybird project would be the rightful successor to Firefox

mke a month ago

Once again, note that if you're the kind of user who shuns Brave because the CEO says stupid stuff every once in a while, you'll probably not look fondly upon Ladybird's project lead and main developer being scared of pronouns.

See the issue on github.

If you don't care about that, it's an interesting project. Can't say I approve, though.

Posting this to inform people and let each one decide what to do on their own. Don't harass anyone, please.

ProdigalFrog a month ago

Ladybird is in a prime position if they keep up their steady progress, I really hope they succeed.

PrivateNoob a month ago

I would be happy to seem them being open to use already working solutions, and not doing everything by themselves, since it just slows development speed by a lot, but it's understandable.

Aatube a month ago

Diversifying into non-firefox stuff people can pay for is the way they try to get some extra revenue in case something catastrophic happens.

TheJack a month ago

I don't think diversification gonna help with the mindset Mozilla Foundation have.

For my take on Mozilla, please read the reply I've just posted:

https://lemmy.world/comment/11639087

Thanks.

Kecessa a month ago

How about... AI instead?

mlg a month ago

Almost hoping this somehow causes browser support to fracture again.

It would be a pain for developers, but firefox and chrome using a gig of ram to view webpages and play videos is horrendous even with isolated design.

Also because I'm tired of google dictating the www by being a monopoly. It's 2024 and jpegxl is being treated as ransomware as if enabling a god damn image format is too hard for web browsers. HTTP3/QUIC was 100% google's invention that they just threw onto the web because no one else is developing this standard anymore. Manifest v3 is an explicit attempt to limit user control over web content. They even cornered the market along with Microsoft using gmail.

sparkle a month ago, edited a month ago

It would be a pain for developers, but firefox and chrome using a gig of ram to view webpages and play videos is horrendous even with isolated design.

That can't be helped. Hard to explain well without knowing how much CS you're familiar with, but basically in order to guarantee security/user safety you have to sandbox each tab (basically running an entirely separate container program for each tab which constantly checks for illegal memory access to prevent it from being exploited), all separately running their own interpreters for javascript/typescript, HTML, CSS, all of which are *very* resource intensive (mainly javascript/typescript). There's not really any getting around this, no matter how well you design your browser.

Now, *theoretically*, with the growing popularity/advances in WebAssembly, and increase in usage of frameworks/graphics APIs like WebGPU, you could completely get rid of that sandboxing *and* completely get rid of the extremely slow javascript and html/css, in favor of completely using safe, compiled Rust programs. There's active research using versions of WASM which only accept completely safe code (mainly safe Rust code) so using memory bugs generated from user error to access data in different tabs becomes impossible (aside from potential unaddressed bugs in Rust itself obviously) and you don't need to sandbox each tab – the program practically sandboxes itself. Then you could potentially have browsers with *thousands* of tabs perform perfectly fine, assuming each of the websites is programmed competently.

But that's not going to happen, because billions of users rely on HTML/CSS and JS, and it's *not* pretty to transition away from. Getting rid of it would be like getting rid of pointy shoes, or getting rid of US Customary Units in the US, it's just not happening no matter how much benefit it would bring to users. It's not so much of a browser company issue as it is *everyone ever would complain* and potentially trillions of dollars of damage would be done. Also frontend web devs can barely punch out a "hello world" program in JS so there's no way most of them are gonna be touching Rust or Haskell or something.

ipkpjersi a month ago

Also frontend web devs can barely punch out a “hello world” program in JS so there’s no way most of them are gonna be touching Rust or Haskell or something.

This is kind of true, but at the same time, I've also seen some pretty talented front-end devs fwiw.

ipkpjersi a month ago

If this hurts Firefox more than it hurts Chrome, that's probably not a good thing for the health of the Internet. Google running the Internet unchecked would be bad for everyone.

ulkesh a month ago

So Mozilla will find other forms of funding. That’s how this works.

aggelalex a month ago

Everybody forgets that if chrome and chromium breaks away from Google because of this ruling, it's going to have the same issues as Firefox, if not worse because it's an arguably worse product. The ruling has been pronounced, but what will happen because of it is yet to be defined.

Tyfud a month ago

That's not it at all. The issue is funding Mozilla. Having it as the default search engine is something google currently pays them for the right for. If the DOJ says that's anti-trust practices, then Google stops paying Mozilla for that right, and 80% of Mozilla's funding dries up overnight.

Scrollone a month ago

I feel like the real problem is Google paying Apple, since they're both major players, not Google paying Mozilla. Firefox is not a major player at all (unluckily...)

ShepherdPie a month ago

Why would Chrome/chromium break away? Isn't this just about the search engine side of things? There's no need to dump Chrome if all they need to do is drop themselves as the default search engine.

sparkle a month ago

Tax/fine Google more and give the profits to competitors like Mozilla (as long as those competitors use the funds for Firefox)

BobGnarley a month ago

Sounds too European for the "land of the free"

sparkle a month ago

The land of the free? Whoever told you that is your enemy!

FeelThePower a month ago

situational irony

Petter1 a month ago

I hope some governments and EU see the need of a foss browser engine alternative from a non-profit and stuff some Money there

Chrome is the existential threat to FireFox.

Chrome is... Also Google.

Break up Google, make chrome competitive, and then we'll stop seeing advertisers own the web standards and implement things like AVIF and ManifestV3, and instead embrace open solutions that favor users.

The JPEG XL vs AVIF thing still makes me mad.

Cyber Yuki a month ago

It's a threat to the Mozilla CORPORATION, not the Mozilla Foundation nor the browser.

Nothing to be really scared about. Move along.

bloup a month ago

why do you think the Mozilla corporation losing 86% of their revenue wouldn’t hurt the Firefox browser?

Tja a month ago

There was a well sourced video a few months ago that showed where the money is going. Long story short, not into development, for the most part.

SturgiesYrFase a month ago

Well, only way I can figure it wouldn't effect the foundation, is that the corporation is a wholly owned subsidiary of the foundation, presumably this is to protect the foundation financially and legally from anything that might happen to the corporation.

A1kmm a month ago

The corporation is owned by the foundation, and does most of the browser development. If you want the browser development to continue, it is a concern.

Cyber Yuki a month ago

Not necessarily. Corporate money has a hidden contract. Mainly, you will develop what we tell you to develop and you will stall what we tell you to stall.

Google money is ad money. It's DRM money, it's private silo money, not general development money.

If you believe corporations drive all good development in the world, look at how many projects have been bought and killed by Microsoft.

In fact, why would Firefox accept money from one of its competitors? That's SUPER fucked up.

Just think about the anti features that Google mmay want Firefox to implement: Unlockable ads, third party cookies, user tracking, and so on.

Is tha the development we want?

I say, let's open fundraisers and keep Firefox free of corporate influence.

Mwa a month ago

ngl they can still get funding from donations but it only makes a little bit of their revenue

VanHalbgott a month ago, edited a month ago

Why can’t Firefox use DuckDuckGo instead?

Ech a month ago

The problem isn't the search engine - it's the money.

The problem is would DDG pay them $500 million to be the default. That's doubtful.

foofy a month ago

Firefox can do without Google being the default fine. What they can't do without is all the money that Google pays them to make Google be the default.

Jo Miran a month ago

$510MM out of $593MM?!? WTF Mozilla?

AnUnusualRelic a month ago

The problem is: who is going to hive money for a web browser?

They got a one of a kind deal with Google, which ended up being problematic, but where else are they going to find the same thing?

Asking for donations will get you chump change.

TheGrandNagus a month ago

This. Web engines cost a tremendous amount to develop.

Donations won't raise hundreds of millions per year, unless they get serious commitment from the enterprise sector, which has already settled on Chromium unfortunately.

They're in a tough position.

brucethemoose a month ago, edited a month ago

Mozilla management was paid millions to develop a new “vision” of a theoretical future with AI chatbots

Is this llamafile?

The thing about LLMs is that *no one* knows how to write the ultra low level optimizations/runtimes, so they port others (llamafile largely borrows from llama.cpp AFAIK, albeit with some major contributions from their own devs).

Performance is insanely critical because they're so darn hard to run, and new models/features come out weekly which no sane dev can keep up with without massive critical mass (like HF Transformers, mainly, with llama.cpp *barely* keeping up with some major jank).

So... I'm not sure what Mozilla is thinking here. They don't have many of those kind of devs, they don't have a GPU farm, they're not even contributing to promising webassembly projects like mlc-llm. They're just one of a bazillion companies that was ordered to get into AI with no real purpose or advantage. And while Gemma 2B may be the "first" model that's kinda OK on average PCs, we're still a long way away from easy mass local deployment.

Anyway, what I'm getting at is that I'm a local LLM tinkerer, and I've never touched or even looked at anything from Mozilla. The community would have if *anything of theirs* was super useful.

barsoap a month ago

From what I've heard the general idea is to run AI search on your browsing history, which is a very useful feature. I'm not deep into AI tech at all but to me it looks like that would involve local finetuning, ingesting all that history during inference sounds like a bad idea. It also wouldn't be necessary to generate stuff, only answer "Can you find that article about how nature makes blue feathers" and it's going to spit out previously-read links that match that kind of thing. Also, tl;dr-bot it.

Oh and there's already AI, as in ML, in firefox, in the form of machine translation. Language detection seems to be built-in, translating requires downloading a model per language pair, 16M parameters. Trained on workstations with 8GPUs. Which is all to say: You don't need gigantic GPU farms if you aren't training gazillion parameter models on the whole internet.

brucethemoose a month ago

It shoudn't be finetuning, if anything it should be RAG with an embeddings model + regular inference.

This is kinda cool, but it still doesn't seem to justify bogging down a machine with a huge LLM. And I am speaking as a massive local LLM enthusiast who uses them every day.

MigratingtoLemmy a month ago

Will this make ladybird our only hope overnight?

DirkMcCallahan a month ago

Fuck.

Etterra a month ago

Good. Open source that shit.

TheGrandNagus a month ago

I'm not sure what you mean, Firefox is already open source?

explodicle a month ago

Well then *double* open source it! No excuses!

MCasq_qsaCJ_234 a month ago

Don't worry, we have a possible replacement for Mozilla, meet Ladybird

doodledup a month ago

So who's going to fund that who can't fund Mozilla Foundation?

xavier666 a month ago

Zuckerberg : Heyyy....

demizerone a month ago

At least with this project when you donate it goes to direct development.

MCasq_qsaCJ_234 a month ago

Do you mean the other software projects or the other non-software projects?

If the former, there is the Open Technology Fund (OTF), but it is affiliated with USAGM which is part of the government.

coolmojo a month ago

Ladybird can set Google search as the default for a donation from Google. /s

This project looks very cool, I hope it comes to be

FierySpectre a month ago

2026 though...

demizerone a month ago

That's a pretty good date. Browsers are monstrous software projects. I just wish it was written in a memory safer language. Oh well.

FerroMeow a month ago

I guess they read the room and this is why they started delving into the ad business

Todd Bonzalez a month ago

If Mozilla collapses for being too deeply intertwined with Google, I won't mourn them.

Firefox is open source. We probably need to pass the torch to another maintainer anyway. Mozilla has been betraying their original mission a lot.

prof_wafflez a month ago

I'll mourn them but now knowing this gross imbalance of funding it's frustrating that CEO still has a job - and they will surely get a golden parachute while every other employee will just lose their job.

Engywuck a month ago, edited a month ago

Cool. Mozilla is a corrupt, useless org anyway. Not much better than Google.

doodledup a month ago, edited a month ago

Mozilla isn't and org. Mozilla Foundation is an org. And they get a fraction of that money. I don't know what you're talking about but you don't either, it seems.

Kecessa a month ago

Tomato tomato

Sorgan71 a month ago

good. Maybe firefox will die like it should have long ago