• ssm@lemmy.sdf.org
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    edit-2
    2 months ago

    Great article, Makes a lot of the arguments I made against advertiser and mozilla apologists in the previous threads better than I could have.

    I think

    PPA is an additional privacy attack surface that has no value for end users whatsoever [...]

    and

    If they truly believed this was the one path away from the constant data theft perpetuated by the advertising industry, they would've announced this loudly and proudly. They could've given the privacy and general Firefox communities ample time to scrutinize the protocol beforehand.

    sums it up pretty well.

    • solrize@lemmy.ml
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      edit-2
      2 months ago

      scrutinize the protocol beforehand.

      Sorry but that buys into the data miners' self serving myths. It implies the protocol is ok unless some failure makes it leak more information than was intended. In fact it's invasive even if it works exactly as hoped. "Tracking" is a misnomer too. It's hostile surveillance even if it's at population level. (Any nonconsensual surveillance that produces info to be used by people you don't like is hostile by definition. And it's near guaranteed that some of the buyers-advertisers, political campaigns and funders, govt agencies, whatever-will be people you don't like). So shut it down.

  • makeasnek@lemmy.ml
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    edit-2
    2 months ago

    Firefox user and evangelist of over a decade. Fuck Firefox for this. Condescending snake oil bullshit is what this is. There's many ways that Firefox is objectively worse that chrome. It's supported fewer places, it's slower, whatever. Firefox is only good because they're not the web browser with a monopoly and they're a non-profit so they care about things like privacy. But for some reason, they seem determined to destroy all the goodwill that has brought them over time and push users wanting those things away. That's like Firefox's entire user base. I can use some other minority market share browser. Bye Felicia