|
|
|
|
|
by reitanqild
2804 days ago
|
|
Background: I've been a Firefox fan for maybe 10 years and I still consider myself to be one > It was code that did absolutely nothing unless you set a secret flag. It destroyed a lot of trust. Seriously. I too was really confused when I suddenly saw an extension I never installed. (This could happen before when desktop installers could add extensions but I don't think they can anymore so I was properly confused until K searched for it on the Internet.) > It was not advertising. It was an easter egg. Those two are not mutually exclusive :-] |
|
The thing is, Mozilla has always had the ability to put arbitrary things into firefox, and it's always had easter eggs in it. The way they did it was a big mistake but from my point of view only because it was scary-looking (and showed their extension pipeline had issues, I guess), not because of what it actually did.
> Those two are not mutually exclusive :-]
How about this: It wasn't there to advertise to anyone that didn't already know about it.