Critics said the new terms implied Mozilla was asking users for the rights to whatever data they input or upload through Firefox.
Critics said the new terms implied Mozilla was asking users for the rights to whatever data they input or upload through Firefox.
It was pretty damn horrible communication but I never believed Mozilla would go into full on data brokering business.
That wasn’t the point. The point was that the terms as written would allow them to.
No it wouldn’t. For fucks sake, are you a lawyer? Can you read legal definitions?
I don’t need to read legal stuff because we don’t need a ToS: I don’t need one, Firefox doesn’t need one, Mozilla doesn’t need one for Firefox. So, why?
Firefox uses underlying services like Firefox Sync, the New Tabs page which shows ads, a Google service for DNS, and sponsored segments in the search bar.
You don’t need to be a lawyer to read legal contracts.
Their proposed terms of use changes the executable from FOSS to a proprietary application with their source code available.
Firefox, when run completely locally, requires no license to your content because it is not a legal entity. Mozilla, however is.
The only reason Mozilla would require a license is because it intends on using your data outside of your local device.
You are intentionally misreading it.
You’ve literally never read over a license before have you? Here’s some text from the Apache License, V2 for you to compare:
every piece of software you use has a license attached to it. If it doesn’t have a license attached to it then it’s not open source. Granting a license to a copy is a standard part of open source software. Here’s some from the MIT License:
The GPL literally has a Terms and Conditions section to it! One of the most FOSS licenses out there lays out ToC to ensure that they’re followed. This is standard practice. The GPL also mentions “copy” 28 times, not including the word
copyright
. Here’s one of them:I literally can’t think of a single person at Mozilla who would benefit from that situation more than from the status quo.