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Firefox terms up service (it got way worse)

www.mozilla.org

Firefox: About Your Rights

When you upload or input information through Firefox, you hereby grant us a nonexclusive, royalty-free, worldwide license to use that information to help you navigate, experience, and interact with online content as you indicate with your use of Firefox.

Also Firefox now has a Acceptable use policy https://www.mozilla.org/about/legal/acceptable-use/

47 comments
  • Um what the fuck.

    Input information THROUGH the browser and they're granted a right to that info worldwide license to use that? To use what I type into my url bar? To use what I search? To use what I type into forms on websites? This is a more all-encompassing spying license than I think even Google has. This is absurd. This is a spyware license not that of a browser. Not only that, any files I upload, their names, any files I download their names.

    Maybe they'll sell information on who looks like they're doing filesharing, or porn habits, or those with politics a certain US administration present or future may not like.

    This is unacceptable.

    People saying "oh but it's just to use the web" well part of the way they word it, all they have to do is insert spyware/adware or AI as they commonly call it these days and suddenly oh look at that, your normal use of the browser and how the data is used includes sending it all to us or our partners for the purposes of AI/ads, etc. One tiny little change, an addition no one will remark on or notice in future and suddenly this takes on very dire implications.

  • When you upload or input information through Firefox, you hereby grant us a nonexclusive, royalty-free, worldwide license to use that information to help you navigate, experience, and interact with online content as you indicate with your use of Firefox.

    I'm trying to parse this. If you take the basic bits, they're saying they can do anything with the info you give them.

    When you upload or input information through Firefox (anything you do), , you hereby grant us a nonexclusive, royalty-free, worldwide license to use that information.

    The rest is just justification for the first part. They basically can use it in anyway they see fit.

    Do these rights apply to forks?

    Edit: These are the 2 I'm concerned about in the Acceptable Use policy:

    • Violate the copyright, trademark, patent, or other intellectual property rights of others,
    • Violate any person’s rights of privacy or publicity,

    That means corporations can go after you for either.

  • As a user who has not been educated in the field of content copyright legislation, I wonder what exactly are these new terms of service going to do.

  • pacman -S w3m

     resolving dependencies...
        
    looking for conflicting packages...
    
    Package (1)  New Version            Net Change  Download Size
    
    extra/w3m    0.5.3.git20230713_1-1    2,06 MiB       0,98 MiB
    
    Total Download Size:   0,98 MiB
    Total Installed Size:  2,06 MiB
    
    :: Proceed with installation? [Y/n] Y
    
      
47 comments