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by VancouverMan 764 days ago
Anyone who uses Firefox with the belief that it offers "privacy" should really read the Firefox Privacy Notice:

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

Quite a few company and organization names are referenced. These include well-known ones like "Google" and "Microsoft", but also others that (at least to me) are far more obscure, such as "our third-party ad platform Kevel" and "AdMarketplace (a third-party referral platform)".

Questionable words like "send", "sends", "sending", "share", "shares", and "sharing" also appear quite a few times.

More broadly, the notice is quite long. A software product that truly respects its users' privacy should have a short privacy policy, mainly because it isn't collecting data to begin with, it isn't sending data to third parties, and so forth.

I know some people will claim that the data collection and sending that Firefox does is somehow acceptable because some of it can be disabled, or because it might be less than what other browsers do. I don't buy into those arguments. A privacy-respecting browser would have users opt in to enable any functionality that might transmit user data, or just not even include such functionality at all by default (it would have to be voluntarily added via an extension, for example).