Ask HN: Has anyone else gotten the 'Turning Red' ad after Firefox update?

114 points by pmalynin ↗ HN
A few days ago I updated Firefox to be greeted with a full page ad for 'Turning Red.' I don't understand how they think this is acceptable.

Beside the moral issues, this undermines all the reason I would update altogether. Now every time there is a update I have to wonder if I will have Disney shit shoved down my throat?

157 comments

[ 4.2 ms ] story [ 205 ms ] thread
It’ll be whatever excrement paid Mozilla the most. And yes I received and resented it too.
Yes, and we're still fuming about it.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30608022 ("Why am I seeing this adorable [sic] red panda?", 44 comments)

The direct, targeted fix is to disable the "what's new" page after updates:

    (in about:config)
    browser.startup.homepage_override.mstone = "ignore"
- "If browser.startup.homepage_override.mstone is set to "ignore", the browser's homepage will not be overridden after updates."

https://kb.mozillazine.org/Startup.homepage_override_url

The substantive parts of update release notes are still accessible here -- no ads here, so far:

https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/releases/

Just because I always forget and have to look it up, and maybe someone else does too: it's about:config (not configuration or settings or options or advanced or anything like that)
Here it is: https://web.archive.org/web/20220308222503/https://www.mozil...

Those values are insane. “Chinese culture love”!??? What the actual fuck.

This is infuriating.

Billionaires of SV please fund a Philanthropic project for a web browser. Like Jeff Bezos funding Washington Post, we desperately need a window into the internet. The days are numbered.

The chinese culture love part isn't that crazy. It sounds so generic too, like it had to have a certain number of bullet points.
It’s just weird. Imagine if they had plastered “American culture love”.
Yes, it would be strange because it's basically the default unspoken position.
yes, just imagine if there was an entire movie franchise about a patriotic American super soldier dressed in an American flag motif, that'd be crazy right?!
Curious why you singled out that bit and not "Canada/Toronto love"?

Turning Red is the first Pixar film solo-directed by a Chinese-Canadian woman Domee Shi (who also made the Academy Award winning Bao short). The film was inspired by her childhood in Toronto, hence the many Canadian references, and is told from a culturally and gender specific lens. It's a 2nd generation immigrant story.

Remember, there are tons of Chinese people out there who have little or nothing to do with the authoritarian Chinese state. I should know. I'm one of them.

This knee-jerk bias against anything Chinese is xenophobic and racist.

I could have but I noticed that Disney has been kowtowing to CCP since HK protests. So I see a clear link.

I am gonna push back on you for this absolutely baseless accusation of racism. This seems to be a pattern to gain moral superiority over others. Find ways to accuse others of racism/bigotry, what have you.

Little do you know, I've lived in Chengdu for 6 months and still have many friends. So kindly go f yourself.

Living in China doesn't absolve you from holding what is absolutely a racist/xenophobic line of thinking. I don't say you are xenophobic, but your utterances absolutely are.

This is not some attempt on my part to gain any kind of moral superiority but to speak out against what is clearly a baseless insinuation, associating a Pixar film made by a Chinese Canadian director with the CCP when there is no clear link.

Asian Americans are currently targeted with verbal and physical violence because of pervasive undifferentiated narratives the likes of which you espouse.

I am apalled. Not sure what to tell you as a person of Asian origin myself. I hope you find peace.
I am equally appalled. Your origin is immaterial.

Before you insinuate anything in the future, step back and think -- is this true? Did I bother to investigate further? You made insinuations based on vague associations and no evidence at all. Insinuations are deadly because you don't even have to worry about something being true or not because once you've planted an idea, it's there.

Comments like yours create seeds for narratives that get planted and reinforced. You might not care, but many of us have to live with those narratives thrust upon us.

Liking elements of Chinese culture is fine. It's one of the longer continuous cultures left on earth, there's quite a lot of material there. If you can't find anything to love it's probably not a problem with Chinese culture. You can enjoy the mythology of another group without automatically being enthralled by their government, relax.
Telling someone to relax in any argument is pretty condescending.

My guess is that this is due to Disney’s questionable relationship with Chinese Communist Party.

Oh if you only you would step back and investigate for a second what the story is about instead of jumping to such a knee-jerk conclusion....
Come on - this is pure cynicism on Mozilla's part. We're not seeing this because Mozilla is trying to increase cultural understanding (cross cultural understanding is something I wholeheartedly support) - we're seeing this because Mozilla wants to make money by grabbing their users' attention for free and selling it for money.

It's not even opt-in, it's opt-out. We're not Mozilla's customer any more at this point, the customer is the one buying the ad space. Gives a new meaning to "Just Browsing" the web when your browser itself is becoming more and more like a mall.

The implication here is that if you don't agree with them you're either ignorant or racist which isn't great.
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It's very clearly lighthearted, unless you think that "Boy bands" and "General disdain of dodgeball" are overriding, all-consuming values of the Mozilla Foundation.
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Taken out of context, it seems weird. But not so weird when you see this movie is trying to increase representation of asian americans in film. The protagonist is a canadian-chinese girl growing up in canada. It's meant to celebrate diverse cultures of immigrants and improve the self-image of people not represented by hollywood.
How much money would you bet that the vast majority of the staff that contributed to the core of the movie are not asian? I'd bet a lot.
You'd lose a lot too given that Domee Shi is the first solo woman director and first Asian led production at Disney.
Good thing you didn’t bet because you’d have lost a lot.
I did but didn't know what it's about so I closed the tab.
Stop supporting Mozilla.

They are controlled opposition at best, and are completely ideologically possessed and controlled by politics at this point.

Controlled opposition to what, precisely?
Chrome
Who's controlling them? Is that a reference to the money Google pays them every year, presumably to ward off accusations of a browser monopoly?

I think it behooves people to be precise and explicit when they accuse a large non-profit (with a wholly owned corporate subsidiary) of being "controlled opposition."

Yep, only for the „we got no monopoly“ theater
Controlled opposition in the sense that they are literally funded by the opposition. That is plainly not a reasonable situation for healthy competition. Mozilla doesn’t exist without Google’s money and they don’t even allow users to fund the browser itself.
To do this, one has to acknowledge that there are limited options at this point, and very limited potential for a viable browser alternative. Sure, there are 100 or more browsers out there, but the discriminator of viable makes it really tough. By viable, I mean no funny business, no basing it on chrome, no crypto-anythings attached, no bundled pockets.

This might just be me showing my ignorance, but for the common person to be able to stand a chance of writing a full browser that people want to use, we will have to create something new that overlays or subverts the WWW portion of the internet. The current system of RFC's and even knowing which ones we acknowledge and which ones we silently dont, is so byzantine that someone born today could spend the next 30 years of their life trying and they won't be able to make a browser and keep up with web standards and expectations. This here is a big reason why only big and wasteful tech juggernauts can do this.

Im old enough to remember the birth of the WWW, and I never thought things would or even could get this good and bad at the same time. This web needs to be taken out behind the barn so we can think about something new, and maybe this time protect it at all costs.

>By viable, I mean no funny business, no basing it on chrome, no crypto-anythings attached, no bundled pockets.

Lynx does not have any of that

If you encounter a website that does not work in Lynx, complain to the website admin

>If you encounter a website that does not work in Lynx, complain to the website admin

Cool, let me go submit 5,000,000 complaints to a few megacorporations real quick

Is it possible to log into a Google account with Lynx these days?
Lynx is my main browser, something to reconcile is that most of the web does not work without the new trendy design stuff. Single page apps are a big one. I'm a nerd, and willing to make sacrifices, others might not be.
There is no-one else to support. We either give up and let Google win or keep supporting this side, which is broken today, but one day may not be.
On a different thread today, someone mentioned LibreWolf (https://librewolf.net/), which might be a viable browser to support (a fork of Firefox), and for macOS, there's Orion (https://browser.kagi.com/), which is built on WebKit.

When you consider browser engines, you can use Blink (Chrome, Edge, Brave, Opera), WebKit (right now, Safari and Blink only?), or Gecko (Firefox, LibreWolf, others?). I would suggest just supporting anything other than Blink if you want competition. Firefox isn't the only alternative. At least with WebKit there's someone who isn't Google who wants to make changes that won't fill their engine with ads.

Forks of Firefox are no good, if you don't support Firefox. If Firefox dies, there's nothing left to maintain the fork.
This is a really important thing that people often seem not to care about.

It also applies to Chromium forks like ungoogled-chromium.

What does it mean for Google to "win" and why would it be so terrible? Also we should not forget Apple who has a monopoly on what browser functionality makes it into iOS, which is IMO a much bigger threat to the openness of the web than Google.
So one (user-hostile) company having a complete monopoly on the web is less of a threat than two companies having a duopoly?
Stop supporting Mozilla. Stop supporting Chrome or any Chromium-based browsers.

What now? I'm already using Safari but it's not cross-platform.

Dillo? NetSurf? IE?

Only half-serious. If web developers hadn't totally drunk the Goog-Aid and went with 100% JS SPAs when forms and static content would do, we would certainly have more usable browsers and sites.

Safari just means wrangling control from the company who will stop at nothing to sell ads, to hand it to the company who will stop at nothing to sell overpriced hardware.
Ok then, what's the viable alternative?
Webkit is still there, most things still work in it.
I guess I'll try librefox, iceweasel et al.
and support which Chromium fork?
Download Brave.
Yep. It's got all you could want from Firefox -- Mozilla free. (+more)
Except it's just another blink repackage. I think the really important thing is web standards, which means supporting gecko or webkit.
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It also has some obnoxious cryptocurrency ads...
Ads are turned off by default with Brave. If you do not want ads then don't turn them on.
And then use software what for a web browser? Brave hasn't been a web browser for some time now.
What on earth do you mean? I'm literally browsing the web with it right now.
It’s a cryptoscam though.
I honestly believe crypto has a future, but what it looks like I do not know. We're currently in the crypto-bubble, which much like the early web, is full of money grabbers and idiots.

I use Brave as my daily driver, and to hear that it's "cryptoscam" just doesn't align with my experience. You can totally turn off or ignore the crypto stuff if you want. Unlike the majority of the web today which is full of so much tracking, intrusions and scams it seems strange to pass off Brave for offering something different to that.

You can ignore the scam part of the browser if you want but please don’t recommend it to others, or at least tell them you are recommending something that is a scam and that they should know the risks.
I don't know if Brave itself is a cryptoscam. A lot of crypto are blatant scams, true, and another huge chunk are interesting purely as a way to speculate financially.

I don't think the BAT tipping ecosystem fits that pattern: Brave is a normal ad agency that sells adspace for normal money. Second, the BAT they give to users isn't new mints by Brave, it's bought from the open market with a cut from Brave's normal money ad revenue. This means there's always a buyer for the coin, and the sums offered are linked to the normal economy. Means the creators who get tipped BAT can reliably cash it out.

Vivaldi is also a good alternative, without the cryptocurrency stuff some people complain about. They don't have an iOS app though (Brave does).
Is it any worse than opening Firefox and seeing sponsored content from Pocket about how you should totally read this super organic blog post about meal kit subscription boxes?
Yes, because it's much easier to turn that off. Just click the gear in the corner of the new tab page.
Yep. What's the best fork? (Not Brave - didn't like it)
Linux: Falkon (KDE) or GNOME Web

Mac: Safari

Windows: Tough choice. Firefox still probably the best, despite everything.

I really like GNOME Web (aka Epiphany), especially the minimalist UI. But it’s just too slow for some reason. I’m not even sure why, considering how fast WebKit is in its other forms.
i've been happy with Waterfox
Seconded. Idk that the maintainers are trustworthy, but at the very least you get a couple days notice to prep for any of Mozilla's shenanigans.
I didn't get any such ad. But I've have my homepage set to `about:blank` for a decade now.
Winifred Mitchell Baker earns over 3 million dollars per year as CEO of Mozilla.

How many ads do they have to sell to earn only her salary. It’s mindboggling [1]. And she thinks she is „underpaid“.

Browser share down to 3.45% and they only live off their Google Money for the default search engine. If that drys up ...

[1] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitchell_Baker

I think it's funny to see the HN split brain on this: we have nearly daily threads where people soothe themselves by saying that their salary is justified by what people are willing to pay them and not their productivity, and weekly threads where a relatively small-fry CEO is disparaged for her salary.

Is the CEO of Mozilla "worth" $3M/year? I don't know. But it's not clear why Mozilla's apparent executive valuation of her is held to a separate standard from every other shmuck in this industry.

Mozilla is a welfare company that exists so Google can point to another browser and claim they don’t have a monopoly
Even if this is true, I don't understand how it's material to the statement above.
> But it's not clear why Mozilla's apparent executive valuation of her is held to a separate standard from every other shmuck in this industry.

Because they’re not a real company. The same rules don’t apply to Mozilla.

I can't think of any sense in which the corporation that employees Baker is "not a real company." Are you saying that because they're a wholly owned subsidiary?
Companies provide goods and services in exchange for money. If Mozilla was a "real company" their goal would be to increase Firefox's market share.

Google's paying them, but it's not for Firefox to be successful—Google is paying for antitrust cover. To them, Firefox should ideally lumber along with enough market share for them to be considered a "competitor" but not enough to take too much away from Chrome.

Considering Baker's reducing expenses while keeping the status quo: I'd say she deserves that raise from Google's perspective.

> Companies provide goods and services in exchange for money. If Mozilla was a "real company" their goal would be to increase Firefox's market share.

Neither of these is the definition of a company in any country on our planet.

You can dislike her executive compensation (I don't think anybody should be paid that much), but there's nothing illegitimate or particularly unusual about it.

>But it's not clear why Mozilla's apparent executive valuation of her is held to a separate standard

Isn't it? Mozilla is pretty widely regarded as the last defense against complete browser monopoly.

The Mozilla Foundation is a California non-profit corporation exempt from Federal income taxation under IRC 501(c)(3).

My understanding is that Baker is the CEO of the Mozilla corporation, presumably because 501(c)(3)s are subject to additional IRS scrutiny when their compensation is not deemed "reasonable."[1]

Whether or not Mozilla is the "last defense" is immaterial to how much she's paid, as is our Peeping Tom evaluations. If the Mozilla board thinks she's worth that much, then she's worth that much. If you have reasons to doubt their stewardship in ways that would run afoul of the IRS, you should report them.

[1]: https://www.irs.gov/charities-non-profits/charitable-organiz...

She's disparaged for giving herself a significant raise at the same time as laying off a bunch of people. And Firefox has continued to lose market share since then.
She didn't "give herself" a raise. That's almost never how executive compensation works (why would any company allow its CEO to pay themselves as much as they want?). The board voted to give her a raise, in accordance with their bylaws[1].

I linked her personal justification below, but to summarize: relative to her professional cohort, Baker is substantially underpaid. Not doing layoffs would have meant offering pay cuts to a significant number of highly qualified engineers, causing attrition. Instead of doing things the slow and painful way, she did them the fast and painful way. If I was in her position and had the knowledge I currently do (i.e., that just about anyone working at Mozilla can find employment elsewhere easily), I would probably have done the same thing.

None of this, however, means that I think CEOs should be paid as much as they are.

[1]: https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/foundation/documents/bylaws/

> But it's not clear why Mozilla's apparent executive valuation of her is held to a separate standard from every other shmuck in this industry.

If any other schmuck in the industry does as much as a poor job as Baker has done, we'll be in the right by kvetching about them.

I don't know if I would throw that stone in this particular glass house. Socially speaking, the average SWE is probably doing something strictly worse for the world than Baker is (and this is faint praise, to be clear).
It's sentimental, isn't it? Seeing somebody vastly overpaid, underperforming is one thing, but when it's money to (seemingly) actively run one of your favourite things into the ground, it bites.
It hurts.

And they even want me to donate money to them.

In theory this sounds like a decent way to rebuke this point, however there are two important things to consider:

1. Your average software developer employee just simply doesn’t have that much control over their own salary. I believe I may have greater than average control over my own salary, and that doesn’t even compare to the kind of control that high level executives of a company have over their own salaries. Because of this, developers lack the conflict of interest that a CEO has.

2. Though developers may be “overpaid,” especially in the more extreme ends, and other employees may be underpaid, the difference between developers and CEOs is not even in the same wheelhouse. It’s not just a mere discrepancy that can be explained with market rates alone. Data I’ve heard repeated paints a picture that shows CEOs pulling far away of basically everybody, even considering other executive wages being quite high too:

> In 2020, the ratio of CEO-to-typical-worker compensation was 351-to-1 under the realized measure of CEO pay; that is up from 307-to-1 in 2019 and a big increase from 21-to-1 in 1965 and 61-to-1 in 1989.

(Source: https://www.epi.org/publication/ceo-pay-in-2020/)

I don’t think the question is whether the CEO is 351 times more important than the average employee below them. I think the question is, how is it even possible that it’s worth it, in terms of outcomes, to have a CEO make this much more than the average employee? Do you actually think that, if accountability were at least as tied to salary as it was for other employees, it would have been possible for things to get this disparate?

Even if it was actually leading to better outcomes for companies, this kind of income inequality is definitely leading to worse outcomes for society.

> Even if it was actually leading to better outcomes for companies, this kind of income inequality is definitely leading to worse outcomes for society.

No disagreement here. I think CEOs should be paid no more than 10 times their lowest paid employee, and that should be made enforceable by law.

Using 150k as a random number[1], Baker is overpaid by roughly a factor of two based on my "ideal" scheme. But I have the sneaking suspicion that HN would gripe even if she took a 50% pay cut.

[1]: https://www.glassdoor.com/Salary/Mozilla-Salaries-E19129.htm

I think it's a lot easier to criticize Mozilla here because the metrics are obvious. You can draw a chart going up and call that a graph of Baker's salary over time, and then superimpose a chart going down and call that Firefox's market share over time.

And from there it's very easy to ask why Mozilla's CEO keeps getting raises (hell, and hasn't been fired yet) while their main product keeps doing worse and worse by really the only metric that matters for this type of product.

>You can draw a chart going up and call that a graph of Baker's salary over time, and then superimpose a chart going down and call that Firefox's market share over time.

Certainly that is the metric you seem to be focusing on, but maybe the board rewarded her for something else, like reducing debt or improving cash flow or some other metric that might be also very important to Mozilla's long term survival.

Then that's bullshit. Firefox doesn't need Mozilla Corporation to succeed. They should wind down the corp, give any remaining money to the Mozilla Foundation, and run things like most other open source projects that are backed by foundations.
>They should wind down the corp, give any remaining money to the Mozilla Foundation, and run things like most other open source projects that are backed by foundations.

Specifically which project are you referring to and why do you think their success would transfer to Mozilla?

If we're doing charts, you should probably superimpose a third: the average compensation of a CEO at a firm with a similar number of MAUs. Baker is probably underpaid, on average, for the size of Firefox's user base.

Does this mean that she's actually undercompensated? No. $3M/year is an obscene amount of money to pay anyone. But her public position is factually correct[1]: she could go somewhere else and make significantly more money, and it's up to the Mozilla board to determine whether that's a bluff or not.

[1]: https://www.cs.virginia.edu/~evans/paradise/money/

> she could go somewhere else and make significantly more money

With all due respect, that statement elicits a massive DOUBT reaction. It's the sort of thing that the C class spouts to justify their backscratching, but it's hardly a fact for most of them - and for Baker in particular, at this point.

In that case, her board should call her bluff. It's no problem to me if they do!

I wonder how much they'll need to pay her replacement.

The board of directors probably has a nice cozy salary ... and the downfall is going for more than a decade. They don’t care, why bother.
You just have to glance at their bio to get your answer: they have no idea what they are doing. The role is not compensated and clearly treated as a no-profit club.

The whole system of boards and execs is broken, generally speaking, but at MozCorp it looks more broken than average.

Given how terribly Firefox has done under her watch, the board absolutely should call that bluff. If she quits, it's a win. If she accepts a lower salary, it's a win.
I think Mitchell should pay Mozilla. Not the other way around.

Not because she is a woman, because she is doing a terrible job.

Mozilla will stay afloat so Google can tell their “we have no browser monopoly” story.

Mozilla gets 1.2 BILLION$ for 3 years. Mind blowing ... and they handle a product as a side project. Unbelievable.

>hell, and hasn't been fired yet)

Are you aware that she became CEO in December 2019? The previous walked away presumably as he knew that layoffs were coming and people would be after his job, making it one of Baker's first acts as CEO.

I get why people are unhappy with her, but most of the problems predate her becoming CEO and the executive budget overall has shrunk as nobody has replaced her ole position to my knowledge.

Well. You got a point... what is a CEO worth. Is Tim Cook worth 100m per year, how can one human create so much „value“.

I don’t know the answer to this question, but i know that Mozilla is a bleeding company, that does not need 10 different nice to have projects, but a strong core product.

I have the feeling that these men and women just milking Mozilla dry. Firefox lost nearly ALL of their market share and I think the salary should be tied to goals. Real goals.

Maybe it's not create only. How easy is it to be in that position and fuck up 100m dollars' worth?
>Browser share down to 3.45% and they only live off their Google Money for the default search engine.

For others wondering, that figure is across all platforms. For Desktop, they're around 7.5% and for mobile it's 0.5%.

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More I think about it, I feel Firefox should just be a project under the Apache Foundation, which runs tons of wonderful projects. Mozilla shouldn't / needn't exist.
There is no legally required disclosure anywhere about this being a paid endorsement, so we'll have to imagine that Mozilla engineers have spent their time on working to promote a Disney movie just because it's cool and it is available on Disney+.

https://web.archive.org/web/20220308222503/https://www.mozil...

Is disclosure legally required? If something can be understood to be an ad instead of a testimonial or endorsement, I imagined disclosure wasn't required in any jurisdiction.

Regardless, there's precedent for "we'll have to imagine that Mozilla engineers have spent their time on working to promote a Disney movie just because it's cool and it is available on Disney+."

> Mozilla wasn't paid for the "Mr. Robot" tie-in, [Mozilla's chief marketing officer] Kaykas-Wolff said. "We've enjoyed a growing partnership with the show and the show's audience," he said.

https://www.cnet.com/news/privacy/mozilla-backpedals-after-m...

How much did everyone using Firefox pay for the privilege of using their browser? It's ironic to me that there is so much anger over a communist China ad, while at the same time they want to benefit from the hard work of others for free. TANSTAAFL people.
If I could pay for it, I would.
that would be a valid point if mozilla wasn't getting half a billion (?) a year from google and its remarkably incompetent CEO wasn't getting paid 3 million a year after having given herself a big raise while the only product that makes mozilla money is bleeding users.
I find it weird that Mozilla would run ads for Disney+, a DRM infested site that gives Firefox users an intentionally subpar experience.
> Every once in a while, something comes along that we can totally get behind.

Like DRM’d media.

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We need to move away from HTML. It's a fully captured spec that's continuously bent towards the needs of its ad-supported patron. We don't need an alternative browser, we need an alternative interaction platform, built from the ground up for extreme resistance to third-party advertising, interactive experiences with a sensible layout model unencumbered by decades of cruft, with full support for end-user introspection and alteration from day 1.
Was going to post something similar - but I think you capture my thoughts eloquently. I would add that HTTP itself needs to be redesigned, as it favours the client-server model too much. Something like IPFS? Although that doesn't seem to have caught on.
Agreed, but also: HTTP 3.0 is so far removed from HTTP 1.1 that they shouldn't be share the same name.
We just need to move back to an earlier version before Google kept "pushing the web forward" out of everyone else's reach.
For those like me not familiar with this area of popular culture, and thus not heard of Turning Red, I wonder what you guessed it would be about upon reading the title. My thoughts were, in order: the Republican party, and then communism.

Firefox is basically adware at this point.

Except unlike the targeted ads that track everything about you, this is just, an ad.

It pops up once and never again.

I was guessing Project(RED) or whatever it’s called.
Jesus. For real?

This is existentially disappointing.

I’m not sure what ethical profit looks like for FireFox, but as a 15-20-year user I’m finally out.

Honestly, who cares?

Unlike other ads, it's not invading my privacy and it's not really in my way.

They're not tracking me or selling my data or doing anything creepy.

Firefox continues to be the ONLY major browser run by a non-profit, and the ONLY major browser not a shim over chromium. It's still a great product.

If this is what they have to do to keep the lights on, then cool, whatever. How many of y'all who use Firefox donate or buy their VPN anyways.

I don't want Mozilla to let Disney use my personal computer as a billboard.
I clicked the ad to support Mozilla.
I mean, it's a little tacky, but holy hell, I don't get why hackernews seems so up in arms about everything Mozilla tries to do.

They don't want to be purely funded by Google's whims. Them being independent would, if anything, be better for their real mission of being privacy focused.

> I don't get why hackernews seems so up in arms about everything Mozilla tries to do

Because they "gave in to cancel culture" WRT Brendan Eich and his political views. That's at least 90% of it.

Yeah, I can't read any of the comments on political posts on HN anymore :(

Sucks that (if these comments are real and representative) people really care more about that than their fundamental right to privacy.

> I don't get why hackernews seems so up in arms about everything Mozilla tries to do.

Probably because there is a simple answer which will help, if not eliminate a large chunk of their financial issues which is accept donations for Firefox.

Safari is not a shim over Chromium.
ok, you're right, not on mac so I forgot about that one :p

It's better than Chrome, by a lot, but I'd trust Mozilla over Apple any day.

Precisely. Firefox is the only real opponent to Chrome (and Google is evil) and have just a few percent market share. So whats the matter, Mozilla needs money to develop Firefox and as long nobody wants to pay for, it has to be an ad from time to time. Also I don't think this ad is intrusive or anything. I would't like it if they sell my browsing history without my consent to make money, this would be newsworthy. By the way, is it possible that Linux users are treated different? Since I didn't notice this "ad" at all, and as example DRM is under Linux disabled by default, the kb-article is a different one for Windows and Linux: https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/enable-drm#firefox:linu...
- "By the way, is it possible that Linux users are treated different?"

I saw it on Linux; we weren't spared. However, I think the ad was region-locked to North America.

(Also I can confirm Widevine DRM was disabled, so that's not a targeting variable).

Like you, I don’t really care about this particular ad. I’d rather have Firefox make some money to fund itself.

> How many of y'all who use Firefox donate or buy their VPN anyways.

A couple of caveats to note. Donating on the Mozilla site funds Mozilla Foundation, which is the non-profit, and is not the same as Mozilla Corporation (which is the maker of Firefox). AFAIK, the donations to Mozilla Foundation cannot be used to fund Firefox developers/development (at least not directly). As for Mozilla VPN, it’s available only in a few countries.

If MoCo (Mozilla Corporation) would just sell Firefox themes or digital stickers, I’d gladly buy those to support it (anything that’s legal and allows it to take money from people). Being on the outside, I haven’t understand why Mozilla isn’t looking at and exploiting as many revenue streams as possible to reduce the dependence on the massive search engine relationship with Google.

Can someone explain why so many are infuriated by a single ad?
Because we live in ad-less Edenic gardens. I hadn't seen an internet ad in years!

It's not possible to express how unusual and miserable a modern ad looks, from the point of view of someone not acclimatized to them.

When people feel anger they find the easiest outlet for it. Right now, Firefox/Mozilla is a socially acceptable outlet, and thus easy. For example, we don't see posts like this about Tesla's or SpaceX's failings.
Well it is a red panda, i.e. a firefox. In fact, "Turning Red" could be seen as a metaphor for switching from Chrome to Firefox (in addition to, uhhh, the advent of menstruation).

Maybe if they had managed to sneak some product placement for Firefox into the movie it would balance things out and make it seem better.

In all seriousness, I don't like it either, but I wish the question wasn't so unnecessarily hostile ("Disney shit") toward a Pixar movie that I and my young daughter found quite delightful. That kinda makes me want to defend Mozilla.

It's wild the amount of rage hackernews seems to have for Mozilla while it is still the only major privacy-focused browser.
That's precisely because Mozilla is supposed to be the "good guys", but they keep doing stupid things like this to anger their userbase.
Their engineers need to get paid.

Mozilla isn't completely perfect, but they are very good, and getting more independent funding seems like a positive thing to me.

"Mozilla isn't fully perfect and unflawed, so I guess I have no choice but to let Google run the whole web without any competition."

Don't we have posts on here every other day about getting over perfectionism and how its bad?

Red is also associated with communism --- which especially given the recent events in Ukraine, seems rather unfortunate of a coincidence.
Are you operating under the belief that either Ukraine or Russia is communist?
This may have been more useful as a poll https://news.ycombinator.com/newpoll

As a FF desktop user, I honestly have not seen any full page ads for Turning Red. Haven't noticed full page ads for anything (yet) to be honest.

Huh, that's interesting, I haven't seen a poll on hn before. This site continues to surprise.
IMO this is one the least offensive ways for Firefox to get revenue.

Mozilla employs, what, over 700 people to constantly maintain a Browser that is not financed through ad-tech and tracking (Google) or skimming developer revenue (Apple). Having a tab open with a Disney collaboration, that includes some colorful themes, every couple months seems fair to me.

I mean this does not interfere with your day to day browsing, there is no ad-tracking and the partnering with Disney does not create a conflict of interest in terms of Firefox's privacy features.

To be clear, this is not my favorite thing in the world and I agree, these campaigns should not happen monthly, but I'm okay with it for the reasons above :)