• 55 Posts
  • 68 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
cake
Cake day: June 12th, 2023

help-circle
















  • Plenty of OSS licenses have rules baked into them about how you can use the code, or lay out obligations for redistribution.

    “Is it really open source if I have to edit the source code I was given to remove a feature I don’t like?”

    I’m really not being aggressive about this position and I tried to express the ambiguity here. I think what irks me most are these things:

    1. Forking Firefox means it isn’t Firefox - yes, this means that the original was OSS, but you really need to be an expert to get at all the OSS code running on your machine. I mean that it is literally not Firefox, since your fork doesn’t have permission to use the trademarked name.
    2. If we think of the enabling functionality in Firefox as a virtual lock, breaking that lock is illegal under the DMCA. That seems very weird for code that is ostensibly open source.
    3. The addition of the Terms to Firefox seems like an additional restriction (a la Grsecurity, as I mentioned in the post) to the existing license in Firefox. Indeed, Mozilla says that the existing license isn’t “transparent” enough for Firefox users.

    Yes, the purpose of a system is what it does, but the author isn’t presenting any evidence of what it’s doing vis a vis their claim of making technical users quit FF.

    The purpose of the system being what it does is Firefox being spyware - you can’t escape it if you want to use Labs features.

    Love the feedback, and I while I think Firefox is open source, I do see the addition of software locks as backing away from OSS.

    I also went ahead and posted a small update with some additional clarifying thoughts - I don’t think it will satisfy you, unfortunately - but it might help people understand where I am coming from.












  • Well - I don’t know about them being the same.

    The new terms specifically disclaims Mozilla’s ownership of your data:

    This does not give Mozilla any ownership in that content.

    which limits their license to your data to processing it for usage within Firefox or Mozilla services. That is a huge difference. I don’t see how they would be able to claim - in a clickwrap agreement - that Mozilla saying that they don’t own your data somehow grants Mozilla ownership of your data.

    That would be mind boggling.