October 4th, 2024

Mozilla becoming active in online advertising

Mozilla is enhancing online advertising by focusing on product development and privacy-preserving technologies, aiming to balance user privacy with commercial interests while engaging transparently with users and regulators.

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Mozilla becoming active in online advertising

Mozilla is enhancing its approach to online advertising by focusing on product development and infrastructure improvements. The organization aims to create advertising solutions that respect user privacy while balancing commercial interests and public good. Mozilla's CEO, Laura Chambers, emphasized the need for a dual strategy involving both product innovation and infrastructure reform, particularly through their recent acquisition of Anonym, which is developing privacy-preserving technologies for the advertising sector. Mozilla's advertising efforts will prioritize user privacy, utilizing advanced cryptographic techniques to ensure data protection. The company acknowledges that its entry into the advertising market may not be universally welcomed but believes it is essential for fostering a better internet. Mozilla plans to engage transparently with users and regulators, addressing concerns and iterating on its strategies. The overarching goal is to reshape the advertising landscape to prioritize aggregated insights over individual data sharing, thereby creating a more equitable environment for advertisers and users alike. This initiative reflects Mozilla's commitment to tackling complex issues in the digital space and contributing positively to the future of online advertising.

- Mozilla is focusing on improving online advertising through product and infrastructure development.

- The organization aims to balance user privacy with commercial interests in its advertising solutions.

- Anonym, a recent acquisition, is working on privacy-preserving technologies for the advertising industry.

- Mozilla plans to engage transparently with users and regulators regarding its advertising strategies.

- The goal is to reshape the advertising landscape to prioritize aggregated data insights over individual user data sharing.

Link Icon 10 comments
By @goplayoutside - 4 months
Ladybird can't happen soon enough. I've been a ff advocate for many, many years and it pains me to say this, but I've had enough now. I don't want my browser to be made by an advertising company.

I wish Mozilla the best. It would be great if they could be successful in advocating for web ads that consist of, say, a jpeg and an href, but I don't think that's ever going to happen.

By @lovethevoid - 4 months
Interesting the Mozilla board interpreted "ease off the Google reliance money" to mean "become Google"

The core of the problem is really in this very paragraph:

> Right now, the tradeoffs people are asked to make online are too significant. Yes, advertising enables free access to most of what the internet provides, but the lack of practical control we all have over how our data is collected and shared is unacceptable. And solutions to this problem that simply rely on handing more of our data to a few gigantic private companies are not really solutions that help the people who use the internet, at all.

There is no solution to this. You can't advertise effectively and profitably without personal information. No matter how much you try to chop up and anonymize data, it's still personal and even in the absence of information you can wind up collecting a lot of data about someone (as browser fingerprinting does often times). The more information you have, the more is paid. Not even Apple avoids this, despite their privacy claims, and they too see there's far more money to be made as an ad network than letting Google gobble up the space.

But as much as I personally dislike this, my guess will be that this is the most successful (financially) change Mozilla enacts.

By @JohnFen - 4 months
That's all flowery happy-talk, but lurking in the background is the reality that Firefox's main revenue source (Google) is clearly going away and they need to replace it. It seems they've decided to replace it with advertising and everything else is them trying to justify that decision in noble terms.

> we do this fully acknowledging our expanded focus on online advertising won’t be embraced by everyone in our community

I'm glad that they acknowledge this! And deciding to to something that is unpopular isn't a sin or anything. They can do whatever they like. I'm just a bit saddened that this direction means that my trust level with Mozilla and Firefox has to be greatly reduced.

But times change, and often for the worse. Such is life.

By @EA-3167 - 4 months
It's hard to look at this as something other than a trigger for inevitable conflicts of interest, and the same enshittification spiral Google experienced.
By @alexey-salmin - 4 months
I wonder which of the existing nonprofits can have enough weight and trust to pull off a Firefox fork, would be happy to fund it. I donated to Mozilla Foundation for many years but no more.
By @WCSTombs - 4 months
Who is Firefox's target user, anyway? Because it seems a lot of what they've been doing mainly drives people away.

> We know that not everyone in our community will embrace our entrance into this market.

Oh, really? Come on. Nobody is applauding this.

I get it, Firefox users aren't customers, so they are the product. But repeatedly sabotaging their product with these constant blunders doesn't seem like a good strategy.

By @deafpolygon - 4 months
The milk has run dry at the Mozilla teat, so now they need to wring blood from stone.
By @cebert - 4 months
It’s too bad they can’t raise enough from donations to avoid this downward spiral.
By @kstenerud - 4 months
Great... So build an incompatible advertising technology solution on a minority platform (Firefox) that's inferior for advertisers (less juicy data) and not in-line with Google's strategy, and then for some bizarre reason the advertisers will come flocking to it and help the magical fairies at Mozilla "build a better internet"?

Just how stupid do they think we are?