Why?
Is it simply because it is enabled by default by Firefox, or are there other reasons that I am missing?
Largely, yes. Many people didn't signup for the Pocket integration. Mozilla should've ran a poll/survey to gauge interest, but instead it was pushed on users. You can disable it in Firefox if you don't like it. Or just use Librewolf which strips out a bunch of Mozilla stuff.
2) Could just be a nice lil installable add-on, but that would mess with their precious metrics/KPI
I didn't know Pocket before the Firefox integration, either, but I'm really loving it.
Unlike many other sites, it does bring you news and articles you can trust (many by professional journalists).
Regarding the privacy concerns, according to what I've read at the time, it does create a kind of profile about the user, to target you with articles you seem to prefer, but that profile, unlike the competition, is not stored on the cloud... It is stored locally and never leaves your PC.
So... I'm liking it a lot!!!
> App is slow
> App sometimes doesn't have everything offline (isn't that the main point)
> I don't find the button of adding an article from the pocket app :D
I just want a bookmarking app. It feels like a dodgy browser. It tedious to find articles I want to read, tedious to actually read them or even open them in a browser.
I think there's a subconscious hate for feature bloat because of the work many of us do.
It probably actually has some decent features (probably some I want) but every time I see/hear about it I have a pretty negative reflexive reaction.