I see FF users dwindling down, and I'm worried. What could we do to prevent FF from going out of business?
There are so many ways that Mozilla the organization could do more to promote not just a browser, but the open web writ large.
1: https://assets.mozilla.net/annualreport/2021/mozilla-fdn-990...
Do they just not see them and float above the real world in some bubble where a web browser is some abstract thing that has no intersection with reality? Do they know they exist but pretend they don't? Do they scoff and say "they just don't understand, bless them"? Do they scoff and say "those idiots still think we care"?
How is possible to command generational wealth for the platform: millions upon millions in funding, and the goodwill of nearly all open source enthusiasts, over decades, have the entire community basically unanimous in saying "this is going downhill", see all the metrics agree and still plough onwards and downwards?
For a friend, how can I get a job like that?
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=37801542
Bottom line from that thread: The organization supporting Firefox does not have the trust or gravitas left to gain enough competent followers to create the conditions needed to sustain Firefox as a leader
Don't let Firefox threads turn into a litany of unreported hearsay bugs. Get them reported and fixed.
But maybe this is also just my impression. Why not start with a website listing reasons and strengths of the different browsers, and research the selling points of browsers and Firefox specifically. Maybe this could be used to figure out which features could be used for advertising, and which features Firefox is missing to compete with others.
1. Google's fee for default search (the vast majority of their revenue)
2. Paid Firefox services (Mozilla VPN, MDN Plus, etc)
Remember that there are things we don't have any control over in life. You have no control over the success or failure of Firefox because its financial means of survival are controlled by people who are not you (unless you feel like signing up for a VPN).
My understanding is that the Mozilla Corporation is doing just fine for itself. They even have some financial information published [PDF]: https://assets.mozilla.net/annualreport/2021/mozilla-fdn-202...
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/newsletters/2023-05-05/why-go...
2. People need a reason to use it that isn’t privacy. I don’t care about privacy personally and certainly am not changing browsers over it. Could be a killer extension or some new browsing system.
Too bad Firefox OS did not became a real thing.
Actually the company that is preventing a tech monoculture on Chrome is Apple with the mandatory Safari on iOS.
A company can afford to ignore Firefox, but they can’t afford to ignore iOS.
Beyond that there’s nothing you can do. Firefox is paid for by Mozilla Corporation, whose major revenue source is Google’s search partnership. Initiatives like Mozilla VPN and MDN Premium are minuscule in comparison. These are also not available everywhere and Mozilla Corporation doesn’t seem aggressive enough to create more paid or subscription products that people are willing to pay for.
Don’t donate on mozilla.org assuming it will help Firefox directly. That goes to Mozilla Foundation to promote the open web. Not a penny from that can go to Firefox development or marketing.
Certainly, almost every suggestion I've read in threads like this over the years is indistinguishable from concern trolling, so it would seem the hive mind doesn't have any good ideas either.
Is this a thing Rust could do? Or would one need to code this wrapper in C because we'd have to link/embed so many other C projects.
I'm sure it's very difficult -- but is it impossible?
2. Test your website(s) on it. Maybe you don't officially support Firefox, and maybe you're not a QA, but if you are a web developer you should use your site in Firefox and fix any bugs you find. Don't give your users a reason to abandon Firefox.
3. Join the discussion when you disagree with Mozilla's leadership. It may or may not change anything, but large vocal online communities have impacted the direction of large open-source projects before.
https://www.theregister.com/2023/09/29/mozilla_asleep_at_whe...
1. Preventing Firefox going out of business -> as noted by others, Mozilla is actually doing decently well financially, and continues to dedicate a large part of its resources to Firefox -> however given some of its revenue sources, maintaining a certain share of users is important to maintain that state of affairs
2. Driving more adoption of Firefox -> Most users have pretty simple browsing needs, and a non-negligible share still don't know what a browser is (we all know a few I wager) while still using one daily, -> Competing browsers have semi-exclusive or exclusive distribution channels for their products which help drive their adoption (Google.com, some Android flavours, ChromeOS / Mac and iOS / Windows, Bing, Outlook & Office) -> Thus as with any product, driving adoption could be done by: --A. offering a killer feature many (actual) people care enough about to download the browser for - for most people, this would need to be significant speed or friction reduction (Adblock, etc) which Firefox already does well but perhaps not significantly well enough --B. get users early, i.e. partner with websites, apps and influencers that reach younger users to promote/recommend Firefox and its features, notably on the privacy and personalisation side (themes, meta filter, Adblock, password and history sync, etc) - think some viral Tiktoks on the benefits or simple product placement --C. get a series of not-just-tech ambassadors to promote the browser along with the work of the Foundation, which may be done cheaply as they do have commendable initiatives --D. Partner with like-minded organisations to recommend each other's solutions where possible, e.g. Automattic or such -- etc etc
Firefox has been my daily driver on all devices for 20+ years. I personally feel it's never been as good as it is now: it's fast, the memory woes are gone, the sync works like a charm, password suggestion and management is seamless, the Android version is great (love the bottom navbar option).
Probably not perfect - what is - but I just wanted to share a more upbeat comment here, and perhaps one more geared towards the majority of users, who will be less technical and choose their browser's (or better said default to their browser's) for vary different reasons.
I think Firefox enforces some security constraints more strictly than Chrome. One error I've seen often has been blocked resources due to Cross-Origin Resource Sharing without the proper permissions, such as via Access-Control-Allow-Origin headers.
For security related errors, I emphasize that this is a potential security issue and I use FireFox for its security.
*We* don't have any control over the situation.
What Mozilla *could* do but won't is take a strong stand on privacy by default --- something more than lip service. But their sugar daddy wouldn't approve so they can't.
In any case, it's probably too late now --- credibility and integrity have been lost.
Brave is what Firefox could and should have become. Brendan Eich (boo, hiss) grabbed the opportunity that Mozilla intentionally chose to ignore.
I love Firefox, but as long as Safari continues to be the default on iOS and Chrome continues to be the de facto default everywhere else, I don't see much hope for Firefox long term.
I don't think Mozilla is dead like it seemed a year ago though, obviously nowadays it's as influential (close to zero) as some companies like Atlassian.
It should support hardware APIs like Web Serial API (their stance that a browser is not an app platform is ridiculous)
Chromium's huge and underappreciated weakness is that their font rendering on Windows is horrible (at standard 96 DPI anyway), FF could've capitalized on things like that.
Beyond that, FF should be alive as long as there are paid developers to keep it up to date in terms of W3C web standards and security. Mozilla is a non-profit whose revenue is mostly unrelated to the number of FF users.
Their existence is actively harmful to the web. Firefox deserves better.
unless you can bring better leadership to the project, Firefox is a dead end. you’re talking about monocultures: how many different webkitgtk or qtwebengine (chromium)-based browsers are there? how many gecko browsers are there? which one’s the real monoculture?
"We care about your privacy" but they also send your memory dumps to Mozilla when Firefox crashes. "Might contain private data" ... yeah ok. Just one of infinite examples, really.
I bet in a couple of years after we would see the development and rise of an actual non-corporate browser that serves the user. No telemetry, build-in ad blocking, no extension signing, no pushing services, no build-in ads or search engines, more powerful extensions, etc.
Let it die. Let Google be sued and forced to break Chrome away. Let every engine be based on the same engine. Less bugs. Easier for developers. Less user problems.
Replacing it will be a gargantuan effort, but until it's truly dead every attempt to do so won't even be given a chance due to appeals to "just use firefox" or to stop diluting the efforts of the firefox team.
Firefox as it stands is a zombie sucking the efforts of good talented developers away from hypothetical new hopeful things.
As others have said, it's also a backstop for Google against antitrust suits. Firefox surviving without any hope of ever thriving is the ideal scenario for Google.