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Cake day: March 22nd, 2024

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  • I ninja edited, but basically I just don’t see Firefox surviving without “ecosystem leverage” like WebKit, which is permanently embedded in the Apple ecosystem.

    Or even Ladybird, which I imagine will be a permanent fixture on Linux systems.

    So… however they organize it, Mozilla should take their browser dev experience there. But maybe they could keep Firefox the brand alive, and automatically shift users to whatever the new rendering engine will be.


    Alternatively I guess Firefox could stay Mozilla and just adopt WebKit or Ladybird’s engine. “Merge” development efforts across different teams, so to speak, but keep the browser frontend separate.









  • I dispute this as well:


    “Don’t try to be like the other browsers, chasing daily active users. Get back in touch with your userbase and understand why they choose Firefox every day instead of just mindlessly picking one of the larger browsers like the majority of users. Then build a browser for these users, instead of pushing them away by doing what the other browsers (which they actively try to avoid) do.”

    This is a nice sentiment.

    But these aren’t the Internet Explorer days.

    A browser engine with less than 1% market share isn’t going to be supported by web developers, and then everything about its development becomes an uphill battle. Major sites won’t work, and they can’t afford to fixe them all on an ad hoc basis. And again, it’s not like the IE days where the “default” browser is so unbelievably dysfunctional, the OS was more open, and the user base was a bit more technical.

    I’d argue one of Firefox’s most important functions (alongside Safari) is to stop Chrome from becoming the de facto web standard, instead of the HTML spec.

    And it’s been repeatedly demonstrated that “these users” the quote describes is an exceedingly small base. It’s reasonable for Firefox to want to expand that, instead of catering to an ever shrinking pie.

    I do partially agree: Mozilla needs to touch some grass. They need to get sane. But there is no “option to pick” presented to most of the world. And if Mozilla caters to the same oldschool Internet users like they always have, Firefox will die.

    I don’t have a good solution. I’m just arguing that sentiment is applicable to an era we are no longer in.


    but it won’t make the money people happy

    Aka pay the Firefox devs.

    I understand Mozilla wastes a lot of income, but still. This isn’t a hobbyist piece of software, it’s an expensive, labor intense project that needs constant professional attention.

    The income part isn’t trivial, unless they find some alternative source of funding (like the Ladybird project apparently has).


  • While problematic, yeah, I’d dispute that as Firefox’s market share problem.

    Users like you and me, who are even aware of projects like Waterfox, are a minuscule, vanishing minority. We aren’t switching to Chrome anyway. But we aren’t representative of the web’s user base.

    And if most Chrome users were sick of the Gemini spam… they’d have already switched to Firefox, where it’s toggleable and an order of magnitude less in-your-face. But they aren’t.

    Same with Manifest V3. They neutered UBlock on Chrome long ago, yet that’s clearly not dissuading most Chrome users.


    In short, if in-your-face-AI was a dealbreaker for most, Chrome wouldn’t be gaining market share.





  • At this point, it’s just insecurity about stuff not working right on Windows now.


    To that point:

    At the moment, on my dual boot desktop, hardware acceleration and video playback are busted in Chromium browsers on Windows. But it works perfectly fine in Wayland linux. And I don’t really know why.

    This is fascinating to me, as the situation was reversed about a year ago.

    And if I were Windows only, without years of experience under the belt to make Linux seem less daunting, I’d be feeling anxious about that.

    Not that I’m a Linux fanboy: Windows is just better for some specific things. But still, I’m not going to either OS booth to complain.



  • Axios, as it’s known to do, doesn’t emphasize how absolutely fucking bonkers all of this is, but does its usual horse race nonsense, suggesting that if only…

    That’s not fair.

    For the heck of it, I’ll quote the whole article. It’s not that long:

    spoiler

    Anthropic has once again found itself in the Trump administration’s crosshairs over an inability to communicate effectively, sources tell Axios.

    Why it matters: Governing the world’s most consequential technology is coming down to speaking President Trump’s language. Anthropic failed to “honor” a recent cyber executive order, administration officials claim, and the company’s purported failure to take the matter seriously led to its most powerful products being scrubbed from the internet. “Everybody said Anthropic was a bad actor. Some of us said it was time to give them a chance. Now those people are questioning that. They screwed us,” an administration official said. Catch up quick: On Thursday, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy called Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent expressing concerns that Anthropic’s most powerful models, Mythos and Fable, could be jailbroken.

    The administration official said Anthropic knew a jailbreak could happen and chose to distribute it anyway: “They came to every fork in the road and took the wrong fork.” Anthropic says it received explicit approval from the government to deploy Fable. On Friday night, the government imposed stringent export controls that ultimately led Anthropic to take the models offline entirely. Behind the scenes: “Anthropic has not done a great job at trying to speak to the administration and appreciate the ideological differences,” one source familiar with the administration’s thinking said.

    “It’s like they just speak in different languages,” the source said, adding that the company has simply not figured out how to communicate with this administration. The administration first threatened Anthropic with export controls a couple of weeks ago after learning that its cutting-edge Mythos model was made available to an entity in a foreign country with direct ties to the Chinese Communist Party, according to the White House.

    A source close to Anthropic said the company has always worked closely with the government on expanding Mythos access — and in this case, involving a global telecom company, Anthropic revoked Mythos access without the threat of export controls. Amazon’s report raised fresh concerns but Anthropic’s “position at the outset was no, we’re not going to do anything, this is not a real issue,” the source familiar with the administration’s thinking said. The source close to Anthropic said the company did not refuse to resolve the issue. Even before this breakdown, a previous fight between Anthropic and the Pentagon also came down in some ways to just not liking the person on the other side of the negotiating table.

    A White House official told Axios that the Pentagon fight is completely unrelated — but Anthropic’s inability to communicate effectively showed up in a similar, unhelpful way. “We never wanted this to happen. Our number one priority is innovation but our hands were tied,” the White House official said. The optics added fuel to the fire. Anthropic came out with a blog post dismissing the Amazon report. Then the company enlisted a cybersecurity expert viewed by the administration as a “radical Democrat,” who was then celebrated by Chris Krebs, who Trump just fired. The big picture: Anthropic has been the loudest of the frontier AI labs on safety concerns, calling for strong regulation and spooking the Trump administration and the public with their own model’s cyber capabilities.

    The White House led in thawing relations with the embattled company following the Pentagon spat. The technology is moving fast and the government is struggling to catch up, sources said. That — combined with the personality differences — led to a blunt instrument being hastily deployed instead of a scalpel. What’s next: “The immediate crisis was averted but longterm we have a problem,” an administration official said.

    The Commerce Department will meet with Anthropic senior tech staffers Logan Graham, Dave Orr and Nicholas Carlini on Monday, officials told Axios. Meetings are also scheduled with the CIA and White House science advisor Michael Kratsios to work through adhering to that cyber executive order. The bottom line: One option is to make sure Anthropic’s models can’t be jailbroken — though perfect jailbreak resistance may be impossible. Absent that, a source familiar with the administration’s thinking said it may simply come down to an attitude fix where, instead of feeling dismissed, “everyone feels safe, secure and happy.”

    …That’s it.

    It’s just a bunch of sources.

    That’s what journalism is supposed to be. The article author isn’t supposed to inject some heated take, they’re supposed to present what sources relayed, and let readers make the judgement. Anything beyond that is for opinion pieces.

    And Axios didn’t suggest anything; the sources did.

    In other words, that’s not Axios’s job.