Transparency in a discussion platform has nothing to do with what happend here. It does not matter if you leak data and then apologize afterwards, the damage is done and shows once again that trackers, telemetry and such things belong into no software. This is well-known. I said that 20 years ago, if Mozilla wants to introduce studies and telemetry they should do that in beta or test builds. What Mozilla did instead was, because of people trying to remove telemetry and disable it by default they restricted about config so that it is much harder to beginners to change specific things, claiming this was done because questionable reason such as people could do damage with it. They basically restrict and prevented, or tried to, people to change the Browser how they want, that happened afterwards because people disliked xyz and then tried to - optimize - it.
Mozilla has history of incidents bigger than Chrome, there is nothing to argue about. This is just another one and the next will come. What Mozilla claims afterwards with their unprofessional statement about the percentage is irrelevant because no one can reveal the truth here.
Leaking user data is binary, you leak or you do not leak. End of story.
Firefox suck big time regarding privacy,security and the claims Mozilla does are already all debunked. There are lots of articles from the competition, researchers, experts clearly saying that Mozilla is worst - by default - with default settings compared to all other Browsers. Maybe similar like Chrome vanilla. There is nothing to argue here, I already presented all of these research on my Twitter among other platforms.
GUI is subjective and not what the topic here is about. THIS would not be binary, and reflects taste.
There is some level of compromise. Are there (usable) browsers that do not track you? They all do to some degree (even simple usage stats to guide development). The question is how much they track and with whom the data is shared.
AFAIK telemetry can easily be disabled in FF. Not sure what “debunking” you are refering to - I will not go to twittr to check (side note: seems bit ridiculous to talk about privacy/tracking/etc. and tweet at the same time…).
See the problem friend. No one gives a 💩 what they say afterwards. Trust is gone. Telemetry cannot be easily be disabled, even if you go trough about config there are some flags that are not be able to easily switch on and off. Mozilla does that for a reason. Maybe actually check your Browser. Mozilla made it much harder for everyone to simply opt-out of everything.
Bugs are bugs and transparency matters IMO.
There is some level of compromise. Are there (usable) browsers that do not track you? They all do to some degree (even simple usage stats to guide development). The question is how much they track and with whom the data is shared.
AFAIK telemetry can easily be disabled in FF. Not sure what “debunking” you are refering to - I will not go to twittr to check (side note: seems bit ridiculous to talk about privacy/tracking/etc. and tweet at the same time…).
Topic <- . . . . . . . . . your off-topic points <-
See the problem friend. No one gives a 💩 what they say afterwards. Trust is gone. Telemetry cannot be easily be disabled, even if you go trough about config there are some flags that are not be able to easily switch on and off. Mozilla does that for a reason. Maybe actually check your Browser. Mozilla made it much harder for everyone to simply opt-out of everything.
What are you trying to say? You want to talk about trust issues?
Learn how to concisly respond to the initial points instead of furiosly copy-pasting walls of text.
Peace out.
Maybe learn to get some own new ideas friend and not re-spell some BS you find on the internet.