Mozilla's pivot to AI first browsing raises fundamental questions about what a browser should be. Waterfox won't include them. The browser's job is to serve you, not think for you.
Am engineer. I use AI features in browsers, and know several others who also do. I’m looking forward to trying additional features Mozilla’s going to be bringing in the future.
Basing your view of what everyone does on what everyone you know does is a perfect way to amplify the effects of a social bubble.
Earlier on, Mozilla released a plugin called Orbit that summarized Youtube videos with a single click. Then they shut it down. I’d love to see that back. I’ve found some similar plugins since then but none as elegant and integrated as Orbit was. “Chat with this page” features in general are nice when I come across a big paper or news story where I only want a specific bit of information out of it.
I use the “translate this” function quite frequently, and I’d like to see that using local models instead of relying on Google Translate. I avoid Chrome because I don’t want everything to be Google dominated.
I suspect AI is still too heavyweight for this application yet, but as the advertising wars continue and advertising starts getting slipped directly into the content of pages I bet an AI-enabled adblocker would be nice.
A fact-checker AI that goes through the content of a page and adds footnotes and references would be great. I try to fact-check news stories but it’s a lot of manual drudgery so I’m sure I miss a lot.
Sure, much of this could be done with plugins. Orbit was one originally. But if everybody’s having to create the AI framework for plugins from the ground up that’s going to result in a ton of inconsistency, extra resources wasted, and potential insecurities. I’d like Firefox to provide some kind of unified interface to plugins to let them call AIs as part of whatever they’re doing so that I can pick which models I’d like them to use. I run Ollama on my computer, it provides AI inference to anything that wants to use it locally through a unified API. Something like that built into Firefox would be awesome.
And there’ll likely be plenty of other new things I haven’t thought of to try out. AI is a very active field, there are new models with new capabilities coming out all the time.
I just responded to a similar question by [email protected] above, listing a bunch of things I do with AI that having a framework embedded right into Firefox would make a lot more convenient, hopefully it provides some answers for this as well.
Am engineer. I use AI features in browsers, and know several others who also do. I’m looking forward to trying additional features Mozilla’s going to be bringing in the future.
Basing your view of what everyone does on what everyone you know does is a perfect way to amplify the effects of a social bubble.
Mind explaining what features and why?
Earlier on, Mozilla released a plugin called Orbit that summarized Youtube videos with a single click. Then they shut it down. I’d love to see that back. I’ve found some similar plugins since then but none as elegant and integrated as Orbit was. “Chat with this page” features in general are nice when I come across a big paper or news story where I only want a specific bit of information out of it.
I use the “translate this” function quite frequently, and I’d like to see that using local models instead of relying on Google Translate. I avoid Chrome because I don’t want everything to be Google dominated.
I suspect AI is still too heavyweight for this application yet, but as the advertising wars continue and advertising starts getting slipped directly into the content of pages I bet an AI-enabled adblocker would be nice.
A fact-checker AI that goes through the content of a page and adds footnotes and references would be great. I try to fact-check news stories but it’s a lot of manual drudgery so I’m sure I miss a lot.
Sure, much of this could be done with plugins. Orbit was one originally. But if everybody’s having to create the AI framework for plugins from the ground up that’s going to result in a ton of inconsistency, extra resources wasted, and potential insecurities. I’d like Firefox to provide some kind of unified interface to plugins to let them call AIs as part of whatever they’re doing so that I can pick which models I’d like them to use. I run Ollama on my computer, it provides AI inference to anything that wants to use it locally through a unified API. Something like that built into Firefox would be awesome.
And there’ll likely be plenty of other new things I haven’t thought of to try out. AI is a very active field, there are new models with new capabilities coming out all the time.
You sure are relying on the accuracy of the misinformation machine.
And you sure are relying on just believing whatever you read without any checking whatsoever.
Here’s an example of how AI fact checking can find errors in even extremely well-curated data sources.
Source?
Source for what?
??
You’re specifically making claims about me in your comment. “Source?” for those claims.
Maybe you’ve become so reliant on AI you cant read and understand comments anymore? Put this exchange into ChatGPT and have it explain for you.
Okay, so how do you go about the process of fact checking every news article you read?
I’m curious, what AI features do you use and why? I can’t even figure out what one is supposed to do.
I just responded to a similar question by [email protected] above, listing a bunch of things I do with AI that having a framework embedded right into Firefox would make a lot more convenient, hopefully it provides some answers for this as well.