• finalarbiter@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    3 months ago

    The problem is that they’re pushing it without any way for those of us who really don’t want that crap to strip it out of the browser. I don’t want all this ai garbage, never asked for it, and am harassed at every corner by every fucking company thinking it’s somehow going to change the world.

    Sure, Mozilla allows you to turn off some of these features, but I’ve already had it reenabled in updates after previously disabling it. Further, many of the settings are buried in about:config, which is not a user-friendly way to make those changes. At best, these functionalities should be opt-in and presented as addons that can be installed, rather than being a core part of the browser that cannot be removed.

    • artyom@piefed.social
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      3 months ago

      It is opt in. Or will be. And they’re adding an AI switch.

      Not disagreeing with you, just adding context.

      The bigger problem is that they’re wasting their finite resources on this crap instead of adding actually cool features like their forks are doing.

      • finalarbiter@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        3 months ago

        They keep saying their ai features will be opt-in, and yet everything they’ve rolled out so far is opt-out. I struggle to believe future ‘features’ will be any different. Maybe it’s opt-in in the sense that I’m not required to click whichever button activates it, like whatever they added to the context menu, but that’s not really what opt-in means and degrades my trust in Mozilla.

        I’m also frustrated by their seeming inability to focus on their core browser product and building a popular competitor to chromium browsers instead of going off on side quests.