How Mozilla Ruined Firefox

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  • Опубликовано: 14 июл 2024
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Комментарии • 2,8 тыс.

  • @merevial
    @merevial 11 месяцев назад +5918

    I specifically use Firefox because it's one of the last non-Chromium based browsers. Also Google is giving Firefox a bunch of money cause they need to keep them around as a cop-out to keep U.S. Anti-Trust regulators from investigating Google's control of the browser market share.

    • @EricMurphyxyz
      @EricMurphyxyz  11 месяцев назад +1446

      I think that's a good reason to use Firefox, but it's hard to convince people to use a browser only as a protest against a monopoly.

    • @lavavex
      @lavavex 11 месяцев назад +356

      Same, I hate chrome

    • @mathalphabet5645
      @mathalphabet5645 11 месяцев назад +118

      ​@@EricMurphyxyztrue. It needs to provide something better, to at least someone

    • @sihamhamda47
      @sihamhamda47 11 месяцев назад +47

      I use it almost all the time, and only switch back to Chrome when I need Google Docs to do a collaborative task (group assignment) from my teacher

    • @Ludak021
      @Ludak021 11 месяцев назад

      @@sihamhamda47 that works from firefox for me. I am using it as I type this (it's in a different tab). I use gmail web portal, and all the tools can be found there, and they work)

  • @beavatatlan
    @beavatatlan 11 месяцев назад +842

    Remember Firefox?
    yes. I'm watching this in a firefox browser

    • @God-kx7fe
      @God-kx7fe 11 месяцев назад +26

      Yeah same

    • @tteslov
      @tteslov 11 месяцев назад +17

      same here xd

    • @A_G420
      @A_G420 11 месяцев назад +12

      damnit, me too

    • @stuartgmk
      @stuartgmk 11 месяцев назад +6

      Yup me too

    • @aiineyko224
      @aiineyko224 11 месяцев назад +5

      same

  • @fptbb
    @fptbb 2 месяца назад +188

    The saddest part is that if you want to abandon ship, THERE'S NO MORE SHIPS ON THE SEA.

    • @SXZ-dev
      @SXZ-dev 2 месяца назад

      There is a project in Linux to make a new browser from scratch, called Ladybug. But in any case, Chromium is fine and that's why everyone, even the privacy obsessed browsers like Brave use it

    • @TheRealFallingFist
      @TheRealFallingFist Месяц назад +5

      Ladybird browser! In development, completely from-scratch FOSS browser.

    • @fptbb
      @fptbb Месяц назад +8

      @@TheRealFallingFist nah, they will not have the money to build and will fall into oblivion of obscurity

    • @Green-pn7kq
      @Green-pn7kq Месяц назад +3

      ​@@TheRealFallingFistI personally am glad a from scratch FOSS browser is being built, just hope it or any other Foss browser can one day gain enough traction to overtake some of the other ones

    • @Youtub-IDK
      @Youtub-IDK Месяц назад +1

      tor

  • @flioink
    @flioink 7 месяцев назад +334

    "Remember that fox browser?"
    That one I've been using since forever?

    • @TheOfficialDorianelevator
      @TheOfficialDorianelevator 2 месяца назад +7

      same

    • @coshvjicujmlqef6047
      @coshvjicujmlqef6047 2 месяца назад +2

      time for all websites to block firefox

    • @azi2g
      @azi2g 2 месяца назад +7

      ​@@coshvjicujmlqef6047 bad idea. We need to have more browsers not less.

    • @kootunesscrewy
      @kootunesscrewy Месяц назад

      Firefox isn't like it used to be. Anyone remember DownloadHelper?

    • @bits360wastaken
      @bits360wastaken Месяц назад

      @@coshvjicujmlqef6047 Monopolies from multi billion dollar datamining companies are not a good thing.

  • @TechJolt3d
    @TechJolt3d 11 месяцев назад +1215

    Sometimes I wish that firefox (and thunderbird) were run more like a traditional open source project where the community had a really big say in things.

    • @jamesjacob9632
      @jamesjacob9632 11 месяцев назад +1

      all the big projects are corporate controlled

    • @dfs-comedy
      @dfs-comedy 10 месяцев назад +59

      They are open-source and can be forked, if enough people wanted to take this on...

    • @ivolol
      @ivolol 10 месяцев назад +16

      Maybe thunderbird actually dodged a bullet...

    • @jeanackle
      @jeanackle 10 месяцев назад

      @@ivolol I stopped using Firefox a couple years ago, maybe more. But I still use Thunderbird.
      Had been using Mozilla for over two decades, since the Mozilla Suite, later Seamonkey. Long, long, long time ago.

    • @Jose04537
      @Jose04537 10 месяцев назад +53

      LibreWolf is the nearest you will get.

  • @deivorous-3592
    @deivorous-3592 11 месяцев назад +1298

    As someone who has stuck with Firefox for more than a decade now (it started because FF was less resource hoggy which worked for my slower computers), and I can't really imagine changing. Thanks for exposing Mozilla though, this will just make me take steps to ensure my own privacy instead of counting on the browser to do it for me.

    • @ScramTek
      @ScramTek 11 месяцев назад +10

      I'm curious. Why is changing browsers not an option for you? I used to be a Firefox aficionado back when they led the way in browser extensions. Now, I don't think there's a single aspect of FF that other browsers aren't better at. This past year I've tried out nearly every browser available, apart from those by the very smallest companies.
      Currently I'm trialling Vivaldi which, although loaded with options and customizability, is fast and resource-light. Only detraction is the lack of an iOS browser, but that's due for release soon.
      If you're dead-set on staying with the FF architecture, perhaps give LibreWolf a test. Essentially, it's a custom version of Firefox that is actually committed to privacy and security.

    • @arandomfox999
      @arandomfox999 11 месяцев назад

      @@ScramTek you can harden FireFox yourself if you learn how, in that way you can still customize it to your liking. However I advocate for using multiple browsers for different tasks. FireFox is still my primary browser for general browsing, I don't run into any performance issues with it. I don't know why people are so hung up on browser performance, I haven't really noticed a difference and I use multiple different browsers, from Chromium, Chrome, Brave to FireFox, LibreWolf and even SeaMonkey.

    • @StarHorder
      @StarHorder 11 месяцев назад

      every other browser has googles spyware in it.@@ScramTek

    • @DanT-dh8lz
      @DanT-dh8lz 11 месяцев назад +23

      @@ScramTek well after this video I want to switch to brave, hope they arent scummy, tho nothing is free, you are the product, so who knows how brave makes money. But even if I want I cant switch straight away, I use my toolbar kinda like a bookmark, aka I have hundreds upon hindreds of tabs open, because I always have some stuff I want to get back to later that I dont want to forged but dont wanna deal with now, or videos on yt I want to watch but not now, so I ended up accumulating over a year hundreds of tabs open. I dont want to lose all of that, I know its unlikely ill ever go through all the tabs, but I dont want to lose all that, so until I somehow do all the things and watch all the things I kept open I cant switch :)

    • @ScramTek
      @ScramTek 11 месяцев назад +14

      @@DanT-dh8lz
      Reading how you use browser tabs, I actually physically recoiled from the screen! 🤣
      Each to their own, but that seems insanely unmanageable. Also, with FF being a resource hog, do you not experience huge lag when opening FF or multi-tasking?

  • @fauzirahman3285
    @fauzirahman3285 10 месяцев назад +263

    I'm a firefox user and I strip many of these features and change the settings. I can completely understand why some people leave Firefox for privacy reasons, but moving towards Chrome for that doesn't make sense. Moving to a more obscure privacy focused browser would make more sense. At the moment I'll happily move to a forked Firefox browser where I can still use the same extensions.

    • @carnifexx
      @carnifexx 5 месяцев назад +10

      i moved to waterfox for a while, but went back to firefox because of convinience

    • @VZR_
      @VZR_ 5 месяцев назад +20

      at least firefox lets you harden the f outta it

    • @pseudodistant
      @pseudodistant 4 месяца назад +2

      What if Basilisk Browser?

    • @liyah7867
      @liyah7867 2 месяца назад

      I use Floorp which is a forked Firefox browser and I love it! maybe you should check it out

    • @RedVRCC
      @RedVRCC Месяц назад

      LibreWolf maybe? Hell, just use tor at this point. You still get privacy benefits from using tor on the clearnet.

  • @secondlifearound
    @secondlifearound 6 месяцев назад +57

    🦆 DuckDuckGo isn’t that innocent either.

    • @xeridea
      @xeridea Месяц назад +9

      I never used DuckDuckGo because I think it has a stupid name.

    • @sdprolearning
      @sdprolearning Месяц назад +6

      U should not use windows either for that reason

    • @boid_reaver
      @boid_reaver 17 дней назад

      Or Apple

    • @ParkerPixel
      @ParkerPixel 16 дней назад +2

      as I know they allowed Microsoft to track the user right?

  • @AdroSlice
    @AdroSlice 11 месяцев назад +451

    I use Firefox.
    I started using it because Opera got rid of their best features like tab stacking and their email client, and switched to chromium.
    I continue to use Firefox because I do not wish for an internet where Google controls the entire presentation layer.
    I am okay with Firefox because they provide me the tools to turn off the bullshit, and make it a better experience for myself.

    • @travis5732
      @travis5732 11 месяцев назад +36

      Ever since Opera was sold to the Chinese, I knew that I had to go with the fox.

    • @cheatexp
      @cheatexp 11 месяцев назад +13

      opera got rid of tab stacking?? that's like one of the best browser features ever why did they do that

    • @ADreamingTraveler
      @ADreamingTraveler 11 месяцев назад

      @@travis5732 Yeah Opera is pretty much compromised. Opera also bought Gamemaker and the way they're starting to treat the devs who use it is really sketchy.

    • @yonderalt2662
      @yonderalt2662 11 месяцев назад +25

      If you liked Opera for those features, Vivaldi has them. It has an email client, tab stacking, tab work spaces, web panels, and more.

    • @cheatexp
      @cheatexp 11 месяцев назад

      @@yonderalt2662 im using vivaldi right now! that's why it's so shocking to me like... it's so helpful

  • @Alltracavenger
    @Alltracavenger 10 месяцев назад +463

    The two primary reasons I still use Firefox are because I'm extremely distrustful of Google and as a result anything Chromium-based is suspect. Also, the ad blocking in Firefox is likely going to stay effective longer than anything Chromium-based. Yes, it's absolutely not perfect but I do take privacy measures that go beyond the stock setup.

    • @xFluing
      @xFluing 6 месяцев назад +20

      As a huge firefox fan and supporter I'm gonna say that: isn't chromium open source? All chromium based alternatives like vivaldi or brave can just prune out whatever bullshit google has put in - still, having chromium as the ONLY browser engine sets a bad precedent

    • @jetstreamsam-296
      @jetstreamsam-296 6 месяцев назад +23

      @@xFluing open source doesn't mean its not literal spyware. have you actually looked @ the source code for chromium? the amount of calls home is far beyond what even a web browser would ever need. Also keep in mind that firefox honestly is only just a little bit better :/

    • @timmyanimations8321
      @timmyanimations8321 6 месяцев назад +7

      ​@@jetstreamsam-296In 2022 people got so outraged because google said they would remove sync from chromuim (which is a cloud-based service) so google backed out and chromium still has sync. Just don't use sync maybe. Also they're legally required to tell you everything they do with the data so maybe just read that document instead of THE ENTIRE SOURCE CODE? It sounds like you're getting all your info from biased sources.
      I've never understood why people hate Google so much (aside from youtube, but that's independantly managed so i don't blame their decisions entirely on google).

    • @bumblebeegamerreal
      @bumblebeegamerreal 6 месяцев назад

      @@timmyanimations8321 Other reasons:
      - Manifest V3
      - Google Search censorship/poor quality

    • @ardc0rre
      @ardc0rre 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@timmyanimations8321 people don't have google that much in general. only people who care about privacy do.

  • @lellyparker
    @lellyparker 10 месяцев назад +32

    I don't think anyone left Firefox for ideological reasons. If people hated Google so much they would not have abandoned Forefox for Google Chrome. Google just made a faster slicker browser and Firefox keeps finding ways to be slow after they do a new faster than ever revamp.

  • @cell718
    @cell718 8 месяцев назад +80

    If google kills ad blocker on RUclips we could see a landslide of users.

    • @72lololol
      @72lololol 2 месяца назад +8

      They are about to remove the access to their API meaning that there will be no addblocker anywhere not just on youtube...

    • @D.von.N
      @D.von.N 2 месяца назад +20

      @@72lololol FBI recommends adblocker for safety. Can google afford exposing users to malware by disabling the tool that protects the users?

    • @dijital4801
      @dijital4801 2 месяца назад +2

      Ye thats why ive switched

    • @akashP998
      @akashP998 2 месяца назад +2

      @@D.von.N maybe Google can't on the whole web but it can on its own website (youtube)

    • @EvolutionDataOptimized
      @EvolutionDataOptimized 2 месяца назад +6

      @@D.von.NIf Google gets rid of adblockers or lobbies them to be removed, it might actually be considered monopolistic behavior since you’re forcing everyone away from adblockers that actually block a lot of harmful malware. If Google does nothing to protect anybody’s personal information, they could be hit with either a lawsuit or cease and desist note, meaning a lawsuit from somebody who has had their data leaked, or a cease and desist note from the U.S. Government.

  • @richard343s
    @richard343s 11 месяцев назад +769

    I'm really disappointed in Mozilla for the reasons described in this video.
    But I still use hardened Firefox because I just don't see any better alternatives.
    I would rather not use a chromium based browser.

    • @EricMurphyxyz
      @EricMurphyxyz  11 месяцев назад +208

      Same. For me, hardened Firefox is the "best of the worst".

    • @SaucyJack88
      @SaucyJack88 11 месяцев назад

      Waterfox + uBlockOrigin.
      It's currently my way of browsing the web. I can't think of anything better.

    • @Supervideo1491
      @Supervideo1491 11 месяцев назад +8

      What about Ungoogled Chromium?

    • @joshmayetballoon3103
      @joshmayetballoon3103 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@Supervideo1491idk about OP but its probably because of chromium monopoly or somethin like that

    • @ShadowOfTheSPQR
      @ShadowOfTheSPQR 11 месяцев назад +29

      Ungoogled chromium is among the best you can pick right now, though at a convenience cost and I doubt it will prove very useful if the framework changes push through.

  • @charlesrichards5389
    @charlesrichards5389 11 месяцев назад +902

    Up until about 5 years ago, FireFox had a neat feature where you could right-click a bookmark and one of the options was a text-box in which you could enter descriptions (which must've taken up an imperceptible amount of code). People were using this box to store their user-names and password hints so it could be brought up when using that bookmark. FireFox said they removed it because their telemetry said few people were using this feature. In reality, people using these text-boxes tended to be power-users who also blocked telemetry. 😖

    • @Dwarg91
      @Dwarg91 11 месяцев назад +64

      And that is why I don't block telemetry. Too many useful features used by power users get killed because of this.

    • @charlesrichards5389
      @charlesrichards5389 11 месяцев назад +148

      ​@@Dwarg91 Mozilla saying that they removed it because telemetry reported little usage was pure B.S. (In other words, they're saying "You turning off telemetry mislead us into turning off useful features, so it's YOUR fault!") The text-box was *already being auto-populated by each website by default* when the bookmark was made. But since it wasn't over-written during subsequent visits, it was unique and very useful for those of us who knew how to take advantage of it.

    • @chpsilva
      @chpsilva 10 месяцев назад +46

      @@Dwarg91 and that's why I block it: developers taking dumb decisions based on wrong interpretation of data.

    • @Dwarg91
      @Dwarg91 10 месяцев назад +12

      @@chpsilva except blocking it gives them incorrect data.

    • @chpsilva
      @chpsilva 10 месяцев назад +54

      @@Dwarg91 they can't make decisions based sorely on the lack of data. Besides, allowing extensive telemetry would defeat the entire "privacy first" premise.

  • @Chaos_Rifle
    @Chaos_Rifle 4 месяца назад +18

    I use firefox because google keeps threatening to break ad blocking plugins, and the fact they think its okay to say it at all makes it clear its not a place to stay, so a change had to be made. That leaves firefox as the next best option. Many of my IT friends did it for the same reason, at the same timeframe. It's not better, it's just not claiming its going to get worse. This is just where we are in the browser space now, sadly.
    Can't honestly say I have ever seen a website not work on firefox though, wtf web devs lol

  • @doncaper
    @doncaper 4 месяца назад +27

    What speed are you missing by using firefox? If there is a difference? it must be miliseconds because I don't notice any issues with the speed of Firefox. Why did you say you can't log in with your google account and sync firefox across all your devices? That's UNTRUE, it absolutely syncs across devices, seamlessly. What webites have you used that dont support Firefox? 20 years now and I haven't had that issue.

    • @C-H-O-M-P
      @C-H-O-M-P Месяц назад +4

      The only difference an uninformed user would notice is a different UI and different extensions. You get used to the layout, and all the big extensions have a Firefox version. Almost every chrome feature is also available on FF, and it's not like they work worse or anything.

  • @eUploads
    @eUploads 11 месяцев назад +316

    Firefox might gain some new users if Google finally ends up banning ad blockers from chrome

    • @EricMurphyxyz
      @EricMurphyxyz  11 месяцев назад +96

      Yeah, I'm not sure how much they're really going to push back against Google when they're on Google's leash

    • @thelakeman2538
      @thelakeman2538 11 месяцев назад +44

      ​@@EricMurphyxyzthey've already stated that they will continue supporting WebRequest and other features that allow content blocking even after manifest v3 changes unlike chrome, sure whether they will continue to do so 4 years after google drops it is difficult to say, but considering they're going through all the effort of making their own implementation I doubt they will just conform to chrome.

    • @ok-tr1nw
      @ok-tr1nw 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@EricMurphyxyzfirefox already protested google's web intergrity api so they arent 100% leashed

    • @itsElysian
      @itsElysian 11 месяцев назад +11

      Google isn't banning ad blockers, the new manifest v3 extension like ublock origin lite already exist and more than enough for those casual users.
      They won't switch.

    • @Redhotsmasher
      @Redhotsmasher 11 месяцев назад +35

      ​@@itsElysianThey might once they start seeing ads despite having an adblocker.

  • @helloimatapir
    @helloimatapir 11 месяцев назад +288

    "Mozilla's failed projects are even giving Google's graveyard a run for it's money." Not even comparable. Nobody kills more products than Google.

    • @zsomborszarka2616
      @zsomborszarka2616 10 месяцев назад +15

      True but given the size of mozilla, it is also terrifying.

    • @philheathslegalteam
      @philheathslegalteam 10 месяцев назад +30

      They’re killing off web features. That’s what’s pissing me off as a web developer. Mozilla and Apple are having a cock fight on who can become the next IE11.

    • @Fooney1
      @Fooney1 10 месяцев назад +13

      I buy a google pixel. It has cool new features. Then it updates and the features are gone. WTF.

    • @SakugaAsu
      @SakugaAsu 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@Fooney1Yeah they keep removing and adding things. I wish they had a built in denoiser for videos.

    • @Fooney1
      @Fooney1 10 месяцев назад +8

      @@SakugaAsu I wish you could turn on the flashlight while taking a picture. I know it has flash but how the hell do i see what im taking a picture of before i snap it?

  • @Flashbang_Photo
    @Flashbang_Photo 5 месяцев назад +6

    People seeing how 70 MILLION MONTHLY USERS went away and shrugging it off to Google's marketing has to be the stupidest take i can see. Great video.

  • @drndn
    @drndn 5 месяцев назад +6

    The most important reason that Firefox needs to thrive is because it is the only alternative to Chromium, which is every other browser. If Firefox goes, Chromium will be everything, there will be a 100% monopoly, no competition.

  • @poisonsnivy6439
    @poisonsnivy6439 11 месяцев назад +196

    Amazing to see how Firefox’s worst enemy is Mozilla themselves.
    At least Librewolf a pretty close example to what a stock Firefox install should be

    • @NicksLocker
      @NicksLocker 10 месяцев назад +3

      Looks very cool, I may give it a try

    • @mathfrom0to96
      @mathfrom0to96 10 месяцев назад +6

      ​@@NicksLockeryeah but hardened Firefox is better

    • @Gato303co
      @Gato303co 10 месяцев назад +10

      Yeah, Librewolf is a fork of Firefox without Mozilla's crap
      Only downside is, their support is limited, only support AMD64 architecture, not ARM64 and i really wished I could use it on my Raspberry Pi

    • @Dragonfire511
      @Dragonfire511 10 месяцев назад +3

      I use Librewolf for my bank transactions. It's pretty good at that and for transferring money too.

    • @UndercoverDog
      @UndercoverDog 10 месяцев назад +5

      How big is the developer base?

  • @bettercalldelta
    @bettercalldelta 11 месяцев назад +309

    LibreWolf gang rise up
    But speaking of Firefox itself, I use it because it's the second largest browser that isn't chromium-based. We need to keep google from monopolizing the web. Recently I got my grandparents to switch to Firefox (in the process of making them switch from windows to GNU/Linux aswell), doing my best to help.

    • @KanokYT
      @KanokYT 11 месяцев назад

      I started using Librewolf on my Debian laptop recently and it's been nice. It's kind of like Tor, but without the ability to connect to onion sites and auto-VPN connection. I highly recommend getting a decent VPN to pair with LibreWolf for a much better privacy experience.

    • @Name_cannot_be_blank
      @Name_cannot_be_blank 11 месяцев назад +24

      please dont be that guy that says GNU/Linux
      also as far as i know firefox ran same/ faster than chrome
      which is neat

    • @user-to7ds6sc3p
      @user-to7ds6sc3p 11 месяцев назад +4

      ​@@Name_cannot_be_blank I like Firefox and use it on every device, but you can't deny its flaws.
      The video playback performance is worse, by a lot. A video (4k/60fps) and very high bitrate brings my work laptop to a crawl under firefox. Chrome handles it with 0 issues.

    • @bettercalldelta
      @bettercalldelta 11 месяцев назад +15

      @@Name_cannot_be_blank Just so you know, I am not a hardcore Arch elitist. I use Linux Mint as my OS and I mainly say GNU/Linux out of irony, to make fun of those elitists.

    • @random6033
      @random6033 11 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@Name_cannot_be_blank Firefox's JavaScript engine is slower

  • @conodigrom
    @conodigrom 10 месяцев назад +95

    You've missed a big point: even if Mozilla didn't care about privacy at all, that would still be miles better than alphabet being actively hellbent at sniping every last bit of privacy.

    • @thrumbo
      @thrumbo 5 месяцев назад +8

      true. privacy is not binary.

  • @LeonAlkoholik67
    @LeonAlkoholik67 10 месяцев назад +32

    I remember when Mozilla added Auto-JavaScript execution by default in PDF files within the browser. So much about "privacy & security"... was one of the moments where I really noticed that they are going downhill with bad decisions.

    • @chonkusdonkus
      @chonkusdonkus 8 месяцев назад +9

      It's a tiny subset of javascript.

  • @RationalistRebel
    @RationalistRebel 11 месяцев назад +206

    A big reason Firefox lost market share is because of the proliferation of Android, iOS, and "Chrome" devices that predominately use the default browser. PC users don't want to admit it, but they're not the king of the hill anymore when it comes to userbase. For most of the world, mobile devices aren't just their daily driver, it's their only means of getting online.

    • @TheREALJosephTurner
      @TheREALJosephTurner 10 месяцев назад +18

      Exactly! Even Microsoft tried to make their UI look and act more like an overgrown cell phone, but the PC userbase was still large enough that their complaints were cared about. If MS did that today, there wouldn't be nearly the same level of pushback. Heck, I have friends and family that don't even have a PC anymore, when years ago, they ALL had a PC.

    • @dillonandon
      @dillonandon 10 месяцев назад +13

      There are desktop specific market share graphs for browsers though and Firefox has consistently been losing its desktop audience over the years.

    • @RationalistRebel
      @RationalistRebel 10 месяцев назад +5

      @@dillonandon Though that's true, it's not quite as bad as shown in the video.

    • @klausstock8020
      @klausstock8020 10 месяцев назад +11

      @@dillonandon And losing the desktop audience to Google Chrome - not to MS IE and MS Edge, which come pre-installed on (roughly) 75% of desktop machines. Or Safari (pre-installed on (roughly) 20% of desktop machines).
      Chrome comes pre-installed on about 3% of all desktop machines, Firefox comes pre-installed on most Linux desktop machines (about 3% market share in the desktop market).
      Thanks to rounding, the numbers do not add up to 100%, I know. It's just to give some ballpark figures.
      I guess the main sell point for Firefox was always that it was "anti-Microsoft". So an other browser entering the "not-Microsoft" market share hit them hard..

    • @dizzywow
      @dizzywow 10 месяцев назад

      Yeah there would. There's still a LOT of Windows users. @@TheREALJosephTurner

  • @davidturcotte831
    @davidturcotte831 11 месяцев назад +379

    I think a lot of the Firefox decline is due to more people acquiring computers. As non-tech people acquire computers, they use whatever other people give them and don't look much further. They use their computers as appliances for accessing Facebook or RUclips. They don't know what their browser is. I've heard, in person, someone say "my circle is gone". They deleted their link to Chrome on their Windows 11 desktop.
    There is also the increase in the use of Chromebooks. These use Chrome. That means a huge chunk of the education market uses Chrome. If the market increases and the number of users stays the same, Firefox will see its market share decline.
    The decrease in users can be partly described by people jumping ship. I know people who moved to Edge. I know people who moved to Chrome. There are also a lot of people who moved to alternatives like Vivaldi and Librewolf.
    There are so many confounding variables.

    • @EricMurphyxyz
      @EricMurphyxyz  11 месяцев назад +69

      I know, it's not just one variable that explains Firefox's downfall. But in this video I wanted to show that a lot of the blame still rests on Mozilla's shoulders.

    • @davidturcotte831
      @davidturcotte831 11 месяцев назад +28

      @@EricMurphyxyz
      Yes. That's likely very true. But, it would do us all well to remember what killed Netscape if we want to know why they are currently in decline.
      There's also the RUclipsr factor. A lot of the more privacy-conscious RUclipsrs have been pushing people away from Mozilla.
      But, really, who wants pocket? I have it disabled in my NixOS config.

    • @valcaron
      @valcaron 11 месяцев назад +37

      There are articles about situations in which zoomers don't know what a filesystem is.
      This kind of ignorance is a GIFT to powerful anti-privacy, anti-freedom, pro-DRM, pro-mass-surveillance, pro-censorship establishments.

    • @johncruelty1
      @johncruelty1 11 месяцев назад +1

      the same reason people use edge

    • @davidturcotte831
      @davidturcotte831 11 месяцев назад +20

      @@johncruelty1 People use Edge because it is pre installed and windows harasses people if they try to switch.

  • @HasekuraIsuna
    @HasekuraIsuna 6 месяцев назад +23

    The _one_ small feature I really liked on Firefox was "View Picture" which Chrome early replaced with "Open Picture in New Tab" which is not how I like it.
    Speaking of bad decisions, this was *of course* rather recently removed, with the need of an extension to re-add a feature that has been there for a decade...

    • @HasekuraIsuna
      @HasekuraIsuna 4 месяца назад

      @user-li2yv5je5e I'll have to check that out!

  • @Gatsu563
    @Gatsu563 10 месяцев назад +20

    I was using Firefox since the version 2.0. I finally gave up on them a few months ago. Imposing the proton update with the huge top after so many people expressed their disagreement was a big FU to the users. Customization was one of the huge force of Firefox. I tried Brave and never looked back.

    • @pseudodistant
      @pseudodistant 4 месяца назад +2

      Maybe try a UXP browser like Pale Moon or Basilisk.

    • @Gamerappa
      @Gamerappa 2 месяца назад

      @@pseudodistant and then you're effectively using an outdated version of firefox

    • @pseudodistant
      @pseudodistant 2 месяца назад

      @@Gamerappa except it is still updated. :/
      It got a lot of Defense in Depth updates that eventually became severe CVEs on Firefox that Pale Moon had fixed years back.
      It's likely more secure than Firefox these days...

  • @Lampe2020
    @Lampe2020 11 месяцев назад +65

    I use and continue to use Firefox as my primary browser but I'm worried that it may actually fade into insignificance until the word "Firefox" doesn't ring a bell anymore for most people.

    • @xxXXRAPXXxx
      @xxXXRAPXXxx 10 месяцев назад

      Man if they are as shady as it seems fuck them. Im just worried that there is no real alternatives. Because fuck google and microsoft.

    • @kreuner11
      @kreuner11 10 месяцев назад +1

      yes it does

  • @Violant3
    @Violant3 11 месяцев назад +351

    it''s heartbreaking to watch this video being a firefox user since version 3.5, but you are correct in the fact that the only people who care about firefox nowadays are the loyal fans, even though it's not same anymore i still refuse to use any chromium based browser

    • @konnorj6442
      @konnorj6442 11 месяцев назад

      C my bigger comment above re why ff is dying and brave

    • @reeddeer793
      @reeddeer793 10 месяцев назад

      @@konnorj6442brave is Chinese botnet

    • @youMatterItDoesGetBetter
      @youMatterItDoesGetBetter 6 месяцев назад

      Love Firefox.

    • @torinmoore
      @torinmoore 6 месяцев назад

      @@konnorj6442 brave is chromium

    • @taylor8849
      @taylor8849 6 месяцев назад

      I’ve used Google Chrome for several years, only really remember using Firefox or internet explorer like 10-12 years ago at the computer labs. About several months ago, I was just sick of Google and downloaded Firefox. I’m not tech savvy or crazy about anything, but that with uBlock and user agent switcher is golden. Can say now, am loyal to Firefox

  • @HGStyleOfficiel
    @HGStyleOfficiel 2 месяца назад +4

    That's why I use... Brave ! It's what Firefox was, but actually is. Plus, it's open source. And it's based on Chromium (Chrome's base) so it's convenient, fast and easy to use. It's also compatible with lots of websites, but since websites actually only allows Edge and Chrome, Brave often gets blocked for no reason at all because with some extensions you can make the site thinks you're on Chrome without losing any performance or anything compared to Chrome.

    • @Zyugo
      @Zyugo 2 месяца назад

      I'm probably using them too.

  • @rockaddicthamburg8599
    @rockaddicthamburg8599 10 месяцев назад +26

    I would also love to see Firefox become better again. The only reason for me, to still use it is the privacy add-ons. I've got a lot them installed and there is no other browser, I can get such an effective setup with.
    - Every website containerized
    - AdBlock
    - Tracking Blocker
    - Very strict cookie policy, with everything removed, when leaving a website, or closing a tab
    - Canvas hash scrambled
    - Changing user agent on every new call
    Sadly, my Firefox for Android lacks two vital add-ons and I somewhat lost hope, they will come, or come back
    - No Cookie Auto delete
    - No Containers
    Untill Mozilla changed the mobile Firefox, I could use almost every Add-on from the desktop version. Now there are just the few specific ones.

    • @cyrusol
      @cyrusol 5 месяцев назад

      You can have all that with plugins and proper configuration.

    • @bigh200-ir3vc
      @bigh200-ir3vc 2 месяца назад

      cookie auto delete is a plugin

  • @originalnamegoeshere
    @originalnamegoeshere 11 месяцев назад +165

    Mozilla's methods of integrating ads into Firefox reminds me of how Ubuntu was in the 2010s with Amazon

    • @apina2
      @apina2 11 месяцев назад +12

      🤮

    • @seanfaherty
      @seanfaherty 11 месяцев назад +5

      Wasn’t that also Firefox ?

  • @shaunkruger
    @shaunkruger 11 месяцев назад +70

    I remember when Firefox was the new upstart that was eating the Mozilla browser’s lunch. It grew, was adopted, and finally became the same unresponsive thing it was forked to replace.

    • @FentFanta
      @FentFanta 11 месяцев назад +7

      Embrace, Extend, Extinguish.

    • @eekee6034
      @eekee6034 11 месяцев назад +4

      You and me both. Except, laughably, it got bigger than the old browser while doing a lot less. No composer, no mail, and what was the other feature? IRC?

    • @desertdude540
      @desertdude540 11 месяцев назад +1

      @eekee6034 Usenet was the other, and maybe RSS later on, but by the time RSS got big I'd moved on to Firefox and Thunderbird so I can't say for sure.

    • @eekee6034
      @eekee6034 11 месяцев назад

      @@desertdude540 Oh of course! Thanks

    • @MisterJIFF
      @MisterJIFF 11 месяцев назад +3

      We are old, brother, two decades

  • @BNWilliamGaming
    @BNWilliamGaming Месяц назад +3

    I recently switched from Chrome to Firefox. After watching this video, I think I’ll just set Chrome back as the default browser. I guess Firefox is my secondary browser now…

    • @blahajgaeming
      @blahajgaeming 4 часа назад

      Well, if you do want your privacy just dont use chrome or firefox, use tor, best option for now

  • @-_lIl_-
    @-_lIl_- 26 дней назад +1

    why do people think that everything needs to be updated,
    if it's already perfect, don't change it

  • @ubitubee
    @ubitubee 11 месяцев назад +50

    Basically what’s happening is Google keeping poor Firefox half-alive through Mozilla, so that they don’t have a monopoly but they don’t have competition either.

    • @Knaeckebrotsaege
      @Knaeckebrotsaege 10 месяцев назад +12

      and that complacency of "we'll get money anyway, so why even try" does the rest...

  • @tim_t
    @tim_t 11 месяцев назад +162

    Two reasons why I still use it:
    - it puts Meta sites into their own corner/compartment so they don't creep into other tabs
    - Style Editor in the dev tools which is not in other browsers

    • @guanciottaman
      @guanciottaman 11 месяцев назад +4

      There is style editor in edge

    • @JavierRo_100
      @JavierRo_100 11 месяцев назад +1

      funny enough, i use firefox specifically to run old flash files into a browser.
      An old version of firefox.
      Brave browser is what i'm stuck with at the moment.

    • @tim_t
      @tim_t 11 месяцев назад +4

      @@guanciottaman checked just now-it doesn't.
      Firefox has an entire Style Editor (same group where you'd find Console, Network, etc) tab where you can go ham with adding and testing CSS.

    • @guanciottaman
      @guanciottaman 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@tim_t oh maybe it's in edge dev only (I use it everyday so I'm sure)

    • @tim_t
      @tim_t 11 месяцев назад

      @@guanciottaman is that similar to FireFox Dev Edition where it’s a separate browser?

  • @Ijustdontwantmynamepublic159
    @Ijustdontwantmynamepublic159 2 месяца назад +2

    You can pry my Firefox from my cold greasy hands

  • @karindramuliaputra6484
    @karindramuliaputra6484 Месяц назад +2

    I legit thought a pop up was open when you display it on the video LMAOOO

  • @JoshuaT902
    @JoshuaT902 11 месяцев назад +42

    This is why I use librewolf. It's firefox but with the bad stuff removed and its community is what develops it not an organization.

    • @ShadowOfTheSPQR
      @ShadowOfTheSPQR 11 месяцев назад +10

      Best you can do right now short of userscripts for firefox, but at the end of the day if firefox goes down the drain then librewolf doesn't have the resources to truly fork off and pull it back up.

    • @phr3ui559
      @phr3ui559 11 месяцев назад +2

      i think librewolf is irrelevant if you have arkenfox

    • @ShadowOfTheSPQR
      @ShadowOfTheSPQR 11 месяцев назад

      @@phr3ui559 as long as Mozilla doesn't do anything funny that affects userscripts on update, yeah, it is about the same difference.

    • @Skelterbane69
      @Skelterbane69 11 месяцев назад

      @@phr3ui559 Why is that?

    • @1AEGIS
      @1AEGIS 11 месяцев назад

      why not 32 bits version available?

  • @kittenzrulz2314
    @kittenzrulz2314 11 месяцев назад +22

    I use Libewolf, its essentially Firefox but if they kept their promises and community maintained

  • @LodanSD
    @LodanSD 6 месяцев назад +42

    One thing that has been bothering me about Firefox in recent years is when they constantly take away Customization Options, as weell as making many changes to Force users to having Tabs above the Address bar, like every other modern browser. However, that5 does make it harder for me to move the Entire Window between my two screens, since I would sometimes accidently grab and move only a single a Tab. I also prefer the old wqay where the Tab is attached to the actual browsing section.

    • @metiks111
      @metiks111 6 месяцев назад +2

      You can right click above the adress bar and click "show menu bar". It will show empty space at the top of tha window that you can grab onto.

    • @sdkee
      @sdkee 6 месяцев назад +2

      Or Mozilla can stop forcing its preferences on users and support the legacy (not stupid) way.

    • @monilip
      @monilip 5 месяцев назад

      "Tabs above the Address bar " is reason I refuse to upgrade my Firefox. I was furious when I upgraded and they change's that. I tried few scripts and it works fine but no upgrade never again. I don't really care about safety (I use computer Firefox rarelt for normal browsing, if they want to know I search for coloring pages for my children, go ahead, lol) do I don't need newest version. I just want browser that works and don't changes

    • @Zefirodragon
      @Zefirodragon 5 месяцев назад

      Alternative method to switch windows between screens is using hotkeys. On Windows it's WIN+Shift+Cursor Left/Right, on Linux it can be customized similarly. I find it much easier and faster than dragging with the mouse. I mostly use windows maximized, too.

    • @radoslew
      @radoslew 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@monilipwhat is "normal browsing"?

  • @calvindang7291
    @calvindang7291 10 месяцев назад +8

    The thing that made me first switch to Firefox was that Chrome was having frequent memory leak issues, which never happened to me with Firefox. I started hardening a little bit past that point, but I don't get what people mean by Chrome being faster.

    • @evancombs5159
      @evancombs5159 5 месяцев назад

      Maybe Chrome is faster, but you would only ever notice it if you ran them side by side.

    • @Max15691
      @Max15691 5 месяцев назад +1

      I don't notice any difference in performance between Edge, Chrome, and Firefox. Actually, Firefox uses less RAM. I mostly use Edge but I switch between the others sometimes for some specific uses.

    • @MrPetschko
      @MrPetschko 4 месяца назад +1

      They compare milliseconds, but in the end no one notice

  • @crristox
    @crristox 11 месяцев назад +132

    For me it never was the privacy that enticed me. It was because Firefox is the only browser that's not based in Chromium. I don't remember what was the deal with that, but I guess that involves something like "If chromium fails, every other browser fails"

    • @pyp2205
      @pyp2205 10 месяцев назад +19

      Same, I switched back to Firefox a few years ago not for privacy. But because of how chrome would use a lot of my laptop's ram. Even though now I have a better laptop, I still stick with Firefox because I find it better than chromium based browsers. I'd only use chrome in places where I can't use Firefox, or if a webpage doesn't currently support Firefox.

    • @iclonethefirst
      @iclonethefirst 8 месяцев назад +2

      The reasonI switched was because I don't want to give google a monopoly on browsers. There are already inetances where they prupose Stuff against the W3C because yeah, if do it, everbody else has to follow

    • @saphi20
      @saphi20 7 месяцев назад

      @@pyp2205 firefox uses way more cpu and gpu 🤦‍♂

    • @pyp2205
      @pyp2205 7 месяцев назад +10

      @@saphi20 My task manager says otherwise.

    • @aman.vashisht
      @aman.vashisht 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@saphi20Firefox on single tab uses more resources than Chromium based browsers
      But the case is different in multiple tabs

  • @Silentguy_
    @Silentguy_ 10 месяцев назад +264

    All of this is pretty damning, but having worked in multiple fields of IT for various organizations, I think its simply integration and lack of user awareness that's bringing Firefox's numbers down. Organizations typically use one of two systems and that's Google's Workspace/G Suite, or Microsoft's 365 environment and both of those pair with their respective browsers of Chrome and Edge (which of course is Chromium based).
    The education sector skews these numbers as well, especially in the US. Student devices are Chromebooks and their accounts are through Google. Even if the teachers have Windows devices they also typically have Google accounts using Google services (I.E Classroom) to integrate with their students better and this is all predominantly done through Chrome which is often pre-installed on faculty devices anyways.
    This argument can be even further enforced by looking at the next browser down the list from Chrome, and that is Safari with ~25% market share in browsers. Considering that Safari isn't even available outside of Apple devices that rules out user preference especially since Windows devices still hold by and large majority market share for desktop computers. Safari's numbers are coming purely from people using iPhones, iPads (which make up 20%-22% of mobile device market share) and Mac computers.
    Though of course Edge is also one of the least used (although still more used that Firefox lol) and that's because most people just use Google for services like email, RUclips, Docs, Sheets, etc... So of course the first time they go to sign into Google on a new device they get that nice "install Chrome now" pop up, and they know that the browser they download will instantly sync to their old one so they don't have to re-learn anything. It's just convenience.
    I'll also add that personally I've worked with enough end-users over the years to know that they don't care about their privacy until something violates it right in their face. Most of them could care less about trackers and user data until you point it out to them and even then they'll take the convenience of that over privacy as soon as it annoys them. It's why DuckDuckGo has such low market share in search engines. I use DDG every day, but if you're the kind of user that's used to getting your desired link in the first 3 search results the DDG isn't for you because you have to dig a little deeper than that most of the time.

    • @lesath7883
      @lesath7883 10 месяцев назад +36

      Yep. You hit the nail.
      Microsoft killed Netscape by integrating Explorer into Windows.
      Google is killing Firefox by integrating Chrome into Android.

    • @boristheengineer5160
      @boristheengineer5160 10 месяцев назад +8

      @@lesath7883 I seem to recall that Netscape killed Netscape by being endlessly "beta" with runaway feature creep, speaking as someone who installed it and uninstalled it shortly after. Microsoft just hammered some nails into the coffin with IE.

    • @hardcorshik31
      @hardcorshik31 10 месяцев назад +14

      yeah DDG gives bad results sometimes, but it can also just give results not listed in google. my favorite feature is the bangs, so that I can quickly query google if I really need to

    • @boiledelephant
      @boiledelephant 10 месяцев назад

      This is so spot on.

    • @lesath7883
      @lesath7883 10 месяцев назад +4

      @@boristheengineer5160 The lawsuit against Microsoft said otherwise.

  • @forestrf
    @forestrf 2 месяца назад +3

    > Remember Firefox?
    I'm using it.

  • @StarsManny
    @StarsManny Месяц назад +2

    Firefox is now the yahoo of browsers.

  • @moistness482
    @moistness482 10 месяцев назад +17

    Not private by default, but it is one of the few browsers you can make as private as you want, and be free from the chains of Chromium. That's why I'm staying till the bitter end.

    • @moistness482
      @moistness482 10 месяцев назад

      (i use librewolf btw)

  • @skyfeelan
    @skyfeelan 11 месяцев назад +6

    me watching it using firefox with 209 tabs: interesting
    (209 tabs on chrome will just get shrunk to oblivion, and no, I don't like using onetab)

  • @emiliogonzalezlongoria1107
    @emiliogonzalezlongoria1107 8 месяцев назад +17

    When I used Windows (2019-2022), Firefox was the only browser I actually liked. I tried Edge, and I gave it many opportunities, and it worked great.
    But I was just very satisfied with with Firefox’s performance and customization.
    I started using Firefox only because of the Privacy features, but I genuinely grew to like it and rely on it. Even when I tried other browsers, I kept on coming back to Firefox. Unfortunately there are websites that don’t work well, but that was just not enough for me to change it as the default.

    • @exumbra1399
      @exumbra1399 5 месяцев назад +2

      Yep! There are a few specific reasons I keep using it despite dubious privacy issues:
      - I like the customizable layout.
      - I like the easy-to-understand settings that don't try to obfuscate privacy settings for the sake of "ease of use."
      - I like the extensive library of privacy extensions.
      - I like not needing to have EVERY LAYER of my internet experience logged into one account/online-identity. I don't even have a Firefox Account.
      - I LOVE the Multi-Accounts Container sandboxing extension! It allows me not only to log into the same site multiple times, but also to prevent one website from accessing the cookies of EVERY OTHER SITE I currently have open in the browser. For example, I have a dedicated container that only allows me to access or connect to Facebook if I'm in the *facebook* container, disallowing tracking cookies from all other sites.

    • @sznikers
      @sznikers 5 месяцев назад +5

      I never understood where the "website doesn't work on ff" came from. I only ever had some sites not working on old Opera back when they still had their own engine. Never with FF.

  • @v4n1ty92
    @v4n1ty92 5 месяцев назад +2

    Just a little correction, duck duck go doesn't care about your privacy either.

  • @tommyandersen4004
    @tommyandersen4004 11 месяцев назад +87

    To me the existence of Firefox with its own engine is crucial.
    I tend to agree with a lot of the things you mention in the video. I am not too concerned with the lower performance in benchmarks in Firefox. In real-life situations I do not feel the performance gap, and most tools today tend to be run in a browser. I feel (this is very much subjective) that the performance of Firefox is adequate, improvements are welcome, but it works as is.
    I actually think that the developer tools in Firefox are superior to those in Chrome. Then again I am not a web developer, I work with software development, and has done so for 20 years, but I have mostly managed to stay out of web development, so obviously my views are not those of a professional web developer.
    Chromium or rather Blink is a really good engine, don't get me wrong. The problem is that it is holding the major share of the browser market. With only really Mozillas Gecko (or I guess it's Quantum now) as an alternative. Some will say that having only one engine is a good thing as it creates a more uniform web. As someone who clearly remembers the time of Internet Explorer dominance I heavily disagree.
    One engine to rule them all is not something to desire. First and foremost last time we had one engine to rule them all, we were hit by stale innovation, and questionable design decisions. And while Blink might be open source, in practice it is being pushed by large corporations, who are serving their own interest rather than that of consumer.
    In general innovation is good, for instance Mozillas choice to switch to Rust, is something that has potential to increase stability of the browser. If all engines are based on the same base, then the possibility space for innovation is decreased.
    One other problem with Blink is the list of companies supporting it, Mozilla might not have made the best decisions, and might have a moral issue with regards to their actions. But it is nothing against the list of companies supporting Blink: Google, Microsoft, Apple, Adobe, Meta, just to mention a few. Compared to those Mozilla is small company. And sure there might be smaller companies creating alternative browsers, but they are almost always based on Blink. Do we really think that they have any actual impact on the features that the big companies put into the engine?
    More importantly do we really think than any of the big companies would allow any contributions to the engine, that would harm their income sources. So for companies who live on personal data, it is unlikely that features limiting personal data exposure will make it into the engine.
    One example of the above can be found here: www.theverge.com/2022/6/10/23131029/mozilla-ad-blocking-firefox-google-chrome-privacy-manifest-v3-web-request The blink engines decision to switch to manifest version 3, will remove many of the most efficient ad blockers. Who defended version 2 and ad-blocker support? Mozilla. So for all the issues they have, they still remain one of the strongest proponents of privacy, at least that can offer a viable alternative to Blink/Chromium based browsers.
    So I do not trust Mozilla, but given the choice between Mozilla and the usual suspects: Google, Microsoft, Apple, Adobe, Meta I will choose Mozilla every day.
    One last thought, given that Blink and the companies behind it has more than 95% market share, why do we need to visit a Mozilla page for the best web development reference: developer.mozilla.org I think people tend to forget the huge contributions to the modern web that Mozilla has been behind.
    So I agree that Mozilla has made questionable decisions, I am not concerned about changes to the browser, I am concerned about addition of services such as Pocket that harms privacy. They should have made it as an extension instead. But the alternative is in my opinion worse.
    I have been looking for good forks of the Gecko/Quantum engine, but so far I have not found a proper one. Tor is a special case and in my opinion not a general browser, but a specialist tool for special use cases.

    • @cultist7931
      @cultist7931 11 месяцев назад +2

      >I have been looking for good forks of the Gecko/Quantum engine, but so far I have not found a proper one. Tor is a special case and in my opinion not a general browser, but a specialist tool for special use cases.
      What do you think of LibreWolf or IceCat?

    • @bj0rnen
      @bj0rnen 11 месяцев назад

      These are some good points but I have one small nitpick: Apple uses WebKit (which is a fork of KHTML) and Blink is a fork of WebKit. Apple had WebKit for a long time before Google got into the browser market and at this point they have diverged enough that they warrant separate testing when developing for the web.

    • @EwanMarshall
      @EwanMarshall 10 месяцев назад +8

      I actually find chrome feels worse after usage time and lots of tabs open.

    • @tommyandersen4004
      @tommyandersen4004 10 месяцев назад

      @@cultist7931 IceCat has as far as I know not been updated for quite some time and is not really a usable alternative. LibreWolf was back when I tried it promising but not yet stable, might be time for another go. Waterfox also proved to be a viable option, more polished than LibreWolf, but LibreWolf had better privacy defaults.

    • @GreyDeathVaccine
      @GreyDeathVaccine 10 месяцев назад +3

      As a fullstack developer my self, I love mozilla docs 🙂

  • @trojan6897
    @trojan6897 11 месяцев назад +34

    Wolf gang here :-)

    • @EricMurphyxyz
      @EricMurphyxyz  11 месяцев назад +10

      Represent

    • @trojan6897
      @trojan6897 11 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@EricMurphyxyz btw great video buddy,valid points covered hope they improve because nobody like us wants to shift to shitty chrome :-)

    • @sethbessinger2025
      @sethbessinger2025 11 месяцев назад +3

      My tribe has arrived!

    • @Rocki008
      @Rocki008 11 месяцев назад +1

      Me too, been using librewolf for 3 months now, after I started caring more about privacy

  • @Ma1ne2
    @Ma1ne2 5 месяцев назад +10

    What I hugely respect Mozilla for are their MDN web docs. The go to please to learn about developing the web, web APIs and more. They really did a great job with these docs.

  • @ImpreccablePony
    @ImpreccablePony 5 месяцев назад +2

    With the state of Chrome literally announcing how they are going to bend over people who block ads this video surely aged well.

    • @someguy782
      @someguy782 5 месяцев назад

      Doesn't change that Firefox and Mozilla suck ass.

    • @ImpreccablePony
      @ImpreccablePony 5 месяцев назад

      @@someguy782 I made a switch from Chrome to FF a few months ago, it's not that bad. I got all my favorite extensions that I had on Chrome and the whole charade took maybe 3 hours tops.

  • @ababcb3005
    @ababcb3005 11 месяцев назад +177

    Privacy is important, but to me, customization is even more important than that. That was one of the main things I loved about Firefox way back when. You could change and play around with so many things that the other browsers at the time simply wouldn't let you touch! Sadly, it seems like that is a thing of the past - even something as simple as disabling CORS without installing some shady extensions is easier done in Chrome than in Firefox. If someone came out with an alternative browser focused on having as many features as possible for power users, then I'd switch to that in a heartbeat.

    • @philheathslegalteam
      @philheathslegalteam 10 месяцев назад

      Try out Arc, their fork of chromium is completely ungoogled. The customisation is mind boggling. It’s actually the best browser I’ve tried. More performant than chrome itself too.

    • @galichet18
      @galichet18 10 месяцев назад +13

      I have try vivaldi for some month and it have the most parameters i've seen in a software. The thing i liked the most was the tab stacking as i keep every tab i left in the last session (i should really clean that mess sometimes). I don't remember why but I switched back to firefox.

    • @CakePrincessCelestia
      @CakePrincessCelestia 10 месяцев назад +19

      Absolutely underrated comment. Customization is what makes the thing and sadly, the move to Quantum was a big slap in the face, but it's stilly by far the best.
      Also: If it doesn't have about:config, it's not a browser.

    • @globalist1990
      @globalist1990 10 месяцев назад +5

      Don't forget tabs. They invented tabs.

    • @someonestolemyname
      @someonestolemyname 10 месяцев назад

      Yeah, it is the main reason I am "vendor locked" to Firefox. I think it is still far ahead of other browsers when it comes to customizability as most of them relied too much on chromium. I still have the Photon compact UI with the Lepton chrome CSS, but they are also backing on that end with the addition of the unified extension icon, you can no longer put extension icons in the overflow menu.
      It is also used as the base for 3 privacy based projects, Tor Browser, Arkenfox, and Librewolf, which the last is what I am using.
      I think I tried Opera and Edge as some people claim they have good customizability, but it didn't take long for me to turn away. Don't think I have tried Vivaldi though. The closest I have tried is surprisingly KDE Falkon, which uses QtWebEngine which in turn depends on Google's Blink engine, but it is a lightweight browser and without all the crucial plugins I need.

  • @redstefan6515
    @redstefan6515 10 месяцев назад +140

    I always like to say that librewolf is what firefox was supposed to be, actually private with sensible defaults and great fingerprinting protection out of the box, not chromium based (actually it uses the same browser engine as firefox) and yk the people behind it actually listen to and care about their community. That is why I converted from firefox to librewolf.

    • @bear17293
      @bear17293 6 месяцев назад +6

      What do you use for mobile then?

    • @My_Old_YT_Account
      @My_Old_YT_Account 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@bear17293there's Mull on Android operating on the same idea

    • @Steven-hq3go
      @Steven-hq3go 6 месяцев назад +4

      Librewolf seems cool, I'll keep it in mind

    • @trashtrash2169
      @trashtrash2169 6 месяцев назад +4

      I use Fennec for mobile, it's okey.

    • @karpfenboy
      @karpfenboy 5 месяцев назад

      same

  • @garrettrinquest1605
    @garrettrinquest1605 6 месяцев назад +3

    This is why I'm so interested in forks of Firefox. It's all the benefits of not using Chrome, plus actual privacy in many cases.

  • @NH3R717
    @NH3R717 6 месяцев назад +2

    3:50 Firefox gives you options to care about your own privacy.

  • @DistrosProjects
    @DistrosProjects 11 месяцев назад +18

    One thing I think made Firefox lose marketshare was that Quantum, while being a massive and 100% needed improvement to the browser, was too little too late for people, and every change they've made since has been completely braindead in my opinion.

    • @taxp6872
      @taxp6872 10 месяцев назад +4

      They should have done it in 2014/15 rather then 2017 because at this point i noticed that the Browser began to slow down compered to others. However still enjoing Firefox to this day

  • @omega_sine
    @omega_sine 11 месяцев назад +38

    I now mainly use Firefox but still keep brave around in case a site doesn’t work properly. I’m hoping that the ladybird browser eventually gets good enough for daily use, it would be really cool to have another non-chromium based mainstream browser.

  • @zzk8616
    @zzk8616 5 месяцев назад +4

    Switching to Firefox with some mods from github is the best decision ive made. Since it is open source, there are many mods you can add. More privacy, more snapiness, etc. Im loving it so far

    • @dreyga2
      @dreyga2 18 дней назад

      what mods are u using?

  • @snowcold903
    @snowcold903 5 месяцев назад +2

    I just switched from the bloated chrome based browsers to firefox

  • @glaxmattbas
    @glaxmattbas 11 месяцев назад +146

    I had been using Firefox for 15 years or so. Every new update I was dreading the UI being messed up and wondering which features would get axed. Asking on their ticketing system to add back features that had been supported for years was met with dismissive replies from the maintainers. Eventually I realized that switching to a different browser would be easier than to stick with Firefox...

    • @mrkosmos9421
      @mrkosmos9421 11 месяцев назад +5

      I'm curious, which features are those? Maybe someone can fork them into a new release

    • @glaxmattbas
      @glaxmattbas 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@mrkosmos9421 I mean, it's been going on for years. The most recent thing was when they removed browser.urlbar.clickSelectsAll (which gives you the ability to siable selecting the whole url when clicking on the url bar). Once it was clear they wouldn't add it back, I did make my own fork but after a while I just couldn't be bothered with it any more.
      After that I still used FF for a while but the constant UI changes eventually tired me out.

    • @technicolourmyles
      @technicolourmyles 11 месяцев назад +4

      Which did you switch to?

    • @glaxmattbas
      @glaxmattbas 11 месяцев назад

      @@technicolourmyles I ended up with Brave, it sucks that it's chromium-based but it works well enough

    • @LegioXXI
      @LegioXXI 11 месяцев назад

      @@mrkosmos9421 For example: The simple feature to have the tab bar below your address bar.
      Yes it's very basic but thats why it's even more baffling why such simple customisation options get removed.

  • @Homiloko2
    @Homiloko2 10 месяцев назад +112

    All good points. I still use hardened Firefox because it's pretty much the only decent open source alternative, but it's a shame to have to go through many hoops to configure the browser to be privacy-respecting.

  • @geftsu
    @geftsu Месяц назад +1

    I stopped using Firefox primarily because I was constantly running into issues with it that nobody helped me resolve that were absent on Chrome.
    Same thing with Linux in general, I used to daily drive enthusiast distros like Gentoo or Arch, but I stopped doing so, because I have less and less time to tinker with systems and need my PC to just work and stay out of my way, whether I'm working or gaming.
    I still run Linux on my machine for work (though I run Ubuntu these days, because I don't have time for Arch or Gentoo anymore) and don't use Linux for anything else outside of work. Gaming on Linux is still subpar, modding games (which for me is crucial) is not possible on Linux, and even though I only ever use Linux for work, I constantly run into issues, bugs and annoyances that I need to spend my time searching online to fix. Windows for me just works and does almost everything I need to do and never runs into issues or tests my patience (except development is painful to do on Windows, because I already got used to developer workflow on Linux and it's just better in every way imaginable).

  • @furivno
    @furivno 6 месяцев назад +1

    I use Firefox because it doesn't drop frames in 1440p on RUclips unlike all other chromium based browsers

  • @ou7shined972
    @ou7shined972 11 месяцев назад +4

    Wow Kermit really dislikes Firefox

  • @stephenwilson0386
    @stephenwilson0386 11 месяцев назад +120

    As a longtime Firefox user, I've never had a huge problem with it but they don't seem to do anything interesting or different - that's from a UI and usability standpoint. All this that you talked about regarding privacy is really troubling. I recently switched to Vivaldi, and while yes it has the same base code as Chrome, they put a LOT of extra effort into both the UI and privacy. There's an interview with the Vivaldi CEO on Techlore's channel - definitely worth a watch, and it's what helped make my mind up to switch. People like DT say it's "proprietary garbage," but Vivaldi is very open about their stances on privacy and putting users first, and AFAIK all the code is reviewable even if you can't re-use it.

    • @Redwan777
      @Redwan777 11 месяцев назад +20

      Vivaldi isn't open source.

    • @thediaclub4781
      @thediaclub4781 11 месяцев назад +6

      Yes I switched from Firefox to Vivaldi too. For me it were mainly the UI changes coming with Firefox 89. I still don't understand it but the changelog said something like »Most of users activity is in the top bar so we removed most of the buttons to make it easier«

    • @rigierish3807
      @rigierish3807 11 месяцев назад +8

      I understand the reason they didn't fully open source their project, but they can promise however they want, it won't make them more trustworthy: Google does to it, while it completely steals every bit of information from its users.
      So I'd always prefer a fork of Firefox than a proprietary Vivaldi. OR, they need to release a fully open source, even if it means it's not as pretty as their proprietary blob.
      That would be their best try at gaining users by earning trust.

    • @kingcrimson123
      @kingcrimson123 11 месяцев назад

      Vivaldi is a great browser but I can understand why some people don't use it cause of the proprietary stuff

    • @Deontjie
      @Deontjie 11 месяцев назад +5

      I am not a sheep, I will stay with Firefox.

  • @StupidusMaximusTheFirst
    @StupidusMaximusTheFirst Месяц назад +1

    Yeah, I agree with you, Mozilla back then did all the right things when MS was literally destroying the web, then to see them making deals with Google or advertisers or announcing they now use telemetry on your searches, wow. There is no hope.

  • @aidannotfunny
    @aidannotfunny 8 месяцев назад +1

    I just use Firefox cause it’s not Chromium-based and I don’t want to be too reliant on Google

  • @DanielMemeSmith
    @DanielMemeSmith 11 месяцев назад +23

    I use Firefox and the reasons as to why I do so are complicated:
    - It's not chromium-based
    - At least you could do Hardening if things get dire
    - It's preferred by Linux users (although i'm not one)
    - I used to use Chrome but I switched to Firefox out of fear when I realised Chrome was acting a bit weird once
    - I figured that if Chrome starts being all 1984 and bans ad-blockers I could take refuge in Firefox perhaps (unless they give in to Google).
    - Using it feels unironically unique from the others who use Chrome or Edge (a stupid reason, i know)
    - Another stupid reason but, I like foxes in general, including an anime kitsune called Senko and the character Firefox-chan by Merryweather :)
    Don't get me wrong, I know that the browser is far from private, however some reasons why I use it are sentimental (not very logical), and also because I've kind of given up on trying other browsers. As you said, the thing that makes me salty is that apart from anti-privacy bloatware such as Pocket, some things don't work on Firefox but obviously work better in chromium-based browsers, such as certain browser extensions and websites sometimes (every now and then stuff is buggy in Firefox, like google sign-in pages saying "Something went wrong", but when I try another browser it works fine). In addition there's a social issue: when someone came across me using Firefox once they looked down on me asking me why I still use it in this day and age (and I don't blame him since I have weird reasons, but still it hurt).

    • @pyp2205
      @pyp2205 10 месяцев назад +6

      I switched back to Firefox a few years ago. That reason being Chrome using up my memory, even if I have a couple tabs open. As for privacy, well I honestly think it's almost impossible to have privacy on the internet.

  • @mrkosmos9421
    @mrkosmos9421 11 месяцев назад +8

    I have used Firefox for a really long time, especially because it allows me to navigate through my tabs, while Chrome and Edge keep shrinking them and eventually stop showing them.
    Yes, I know I have issues.
    Eventually, the privacy, adblock and containers stuff kept me into it, but with this information I might just switch to a fork before it starts being awful... but after I save all the tabs I have open

    • @eekee6034
      @eekee6034 11 месяцев назад +1

      I use Firefox for similarly unusual UI reasons. :) In my case, it's the quick access to tabs & everything in full-screen mode.

  • @JonathanKayne
    @JonathanKayne 10 месяцев назад +3

    The only reason I use Firefox is because of the Manifest V3 debacle. It was a bit of work to migrate to another browser and I am just too lazy to switch again.

  • @GavinSeim
    @GavinSeim 5 месяцев назад

    They did it to themselves. I dumped firefox when they nerfed the plugin features and toold I used no longer worked.

  • @geckoram6286
    @geckoram6286 11 месяцев назад +14

    I've always used firefox and it's not that much slower in comparison to chrome or chromium based browsers, nor are there many pages that don't work on firefox. I didn't know the privacy part though, thanks for the video

  • @landoc05
    @landoc05 11 месяцев назад +19

    I've been using Linux since the start (1994) and exclusively since 2006. Never used Chrome in my life, just Firefox and Chromium. With GreaseMonkey and UBlock I can customize to never see anything I don't ever want to see. As a Linux user, I configure my own system to be hardened, and Firefox runs very fast for me, taking little RAM. You just need to know what you're doing.

    • @konnorj6442
      @konnorj6442 11 месяцев назад +3

      Indeed it can be done the problem is it used to be quite easy to do and was viable for the avg user now however its largely beyond the capability of such and the asshats in charge at mozilla have actively worked against those of us that actually made firefox good

    • @GreyDeathVaccine
      @GreyDeathVaccine 10 месяцев назад

      {Grease/Violent}Monkey is a superb tool 🙂

  • @pokefreak2112
    @pokefreak2112 Месяц назад +1

    It's crazy to how there are just no good browsers left. I've gone back to using chrome again a couple years ago. Firefox feels slow and is years behind Chrome when it comes to implementing new API's, Safari is nice but also misses a lot of features, and every chromium-based alternative I've tried has buggy devtools and often their own sketchy stuff going on

  • @justahumanwithamask4089
    @justahumanwithamask4089 8 месяцев назад +1

    Firefox on android had the best UI of all mobile browsers and they got rid of it

  • @brennanlaurent4748
    @brennanlaurent4748 11 месяцев назад +11

    It was a good choice to sub

  • @Akamo.
    @Akamo. 11 месяцев назад +6

    They lost me when they said they support regulation and censorship of the internet.

  • @WP7Nettwerk
    @WP7Nettwerk 10 месяцев назад +1

    I'm for years with Netscape, then Firefox. And I'll continue to use Firefox.

  • @NeverlandSystemAngel
    @NeverlandSystemAngel 10 месяцев назад +2

    It was AMAZING until they decided "lets look like Chrome and shut down personalization and extensions"... they tried to "out-chrome chrome" and just pretend to be something else... and it SUCKED...
    Sadly though... we NEED FIREFOX today. We NEED IT. There's almost NO other browser that's NOT Chrome under the hood- Opera, Maxthon, Opera, Brave, Edge, etc... ALL OF THEM are Chrome.

    • @markh.6687
      @markh.6687 10 месяцев назад

      They shut down extensions only to make more stuff use...Web Extensions! WHAT??! :/

  • @legonlavia
    @legonlavia 11 месяцев назад +6

    4:13 I don't agree that chrome is more convenient, Firefox has better bookmark system, easy to use screenshots. Also, when you have a big number of open tabs, in chrome they are all just squeezed, in firefox they are not and you can still partially see the names of the tabs

  •  11 месяцев назад +3

    Things I like about Firefox:
    * about:config
    * Firefox Sync stores my data on Mozilla’s servers, but not even Mozilla can access it
    * picture-in-picture player
    * translating a web page to a different language without sending any data to any servers
    * not Chromium based

    • @eekee6034
      @eekee6034 11 месяцев назад

      How do you get it to translate without sending data?

    •  11 месяцев назад

      @@eekee6034 Firefox Translations is an upcoming feature. I use it in Firefox Nightly. The translation happens in Firefox itself.

  • @ugly717
    @ugly717 4 месяца назад +1

    I did not know about the whole CEO thing. Wow. It's becoming more and more difficult to defend Firefox. Even the only argument people have(Firefox is important cause of ummmm Chrome monopoly or something) is becoming less and less valid. Why support a company that does not listen to it's users, sell out and lie, and being ran by greedy CEOs?

  • @YukariAkiyama
    @YukariAkiyama 2 месяца назад +2

    Im really sad to hear all this about a one of the few companies I admired, but Im still gonna use hardened Firefox. Its the shiniest turd in a sea of shit

    • @coshvjicujmlqef6047
      @coshvjicujmlqef6047 2 месяца назад +1

      Bro, very simple. If you do not make money by making a web browser, you won't do it. That is capitalism.

  • @rhodaborrocks1654
    @rhodaborrocks1654 11 месяцев назад +6

    Netscape was the first browser I ever used, the competition wasn't available on my OS of choice, and when Netscape fizzled out Firefox seemed to be the way to go. Firefox ticks all the boxes for me, it is stable, intuitive and nothing has ever happened to make me dislike it, so I see no reason to change.

  • @benji-menji
    @benji-menji 11 месяцев назад +5

    Google is paying them so they become a failed company. As long as the developers for firefox are being payed to be not private then the for profit business will have no reason to make their browser good when resenting any form of monetization they can get.

    • @macronomicus
      @macronomicus 11 месяцев назад

      They simply get ad revenue from the google based mozilla search, if/when people click ads they get a tiny cut, its long been that way.

  • @ivantumanov1015
    @ivantumanov1015 Месяц назад +2

    Duck duck go is basically as bad if not worse than google now, also google is the most used search engine so it makes sense to put it as default, and the nice chunk of change funds this free only alternative to chromium. And you can change the search engine. And if you're not the kind of person who changes the default search engine, you'd probably be mad if the default wasn't google. "Mozilla is bad because google is bad!"

  • @czdot
    @czdot 6 месяцев назад +1

    I've been using Firefox since 2004. Nowaday only as a secondary browser. I've been using Vivaldi for 5 years and it's just better.
    If Firefox let me stack tabs and change shortcuts to literally anything, id be still using it.

  • @darkprinc979
    @darkprinc979 11 месяцев назад +11

    I used to use Firefox back in the Windows XP days, but when I switched to Windows 7 I also switched over to Waterfox, which is a fork of Firefox that went 64-bit first, and I've stuck with it ever since then. Given Firefox's recent affair with Big Brother I'm glad I got out so long ago. The Waterfox team seems to largely be holding to the same principles that Mozilla used to, and to my knowledge have largely remained apolitical when it comes to things like censorship. The only real issue I've encountered with Waterfox so far is that it is based on an older version of Firefox, so certain websites may not let you login, although this can be circumvented with the right extension.

    • @thephoenixhasflown
      @thephoenixhasflown 10 месяцев назад

      Yeah I'm basically using the LTS Firefox so I'll have a look into this water Fox.

  • @oaksaint4458
    @oaksaint4458 11 месяцев назад +11

    I still use Firefox, but I died a bit inside when their UI changed. I had to change the internal CSS myself to add visual separators between tabs.
    I hate how everything looks like it was made by Apple now. I hope this design trend goes away soon.

    • @CakePrincessCelestia
      @CakePrincessCelestia 10 месяцев назад

      Apple's "design language" is just pure cancer... it spreads everywhere and you simply can't get rid of it because it keep popping up at three different places at the same time if you manage to remove it at one place.

  • @nflynn
    @nflynn 6 месяцев назад +1

    One word brave, works all the time, no ads etc. FF is janky at best now, it breaks all the time too. They removed a lot of great tools.

  • @fungo6631
    @fungo6631 10 месяцев назад +1

    Firefox is the only browser with proper hardware video acceleration. 4K playback is a nightmare on Chromium based browsers, giving me 100% CPU usage while my GPU supports VP9 video acceleration.
    Firefox doesn't cause these issues, hardware accelerated video works great.

  • @astrosteve
    @astrosteve 10 месяцев назад +11

    I've heard a theory that, since Google is about to break ad blockers and make them nonfunctional, it's going to cause an exodus of people to other browsers, most likely to Firefox or Opera. (Opera does that have a minor scandal going on with that whole GX Aura thing, I imagine everyone is going to forget about it by next week.) The point is, the breaking of Ad blockers is probably what'll save Firefox.

    • @exumbra1399
      @exumbra1399 5 месяцев назад

      @@mikemongrel5587 It also doesn't have Multi-Account Containers extension.

  • @axipont8383
    @axipont8383 11 месяцев назад +61

    Sometimes I wonder if it might be a good idea to make a new, privacy respecting browser from scratch. Problem is, it would likely end up with just a handful of part-time developers and end up in a similar situation to Pale Moon.

    • @konnorj6442
      @konnorj6442 11 месяцев назад +30

      Best privacy based browser that's easy to get for the avg is brave
      However we need to keep mozilla alive since we cannot allow the web to become chromium based only

    • @meta___
      @meta___ 10 месяцев назад

      JavaScript is insanely stupid, you have mentally ill coercion rules, 28392 different test suites to abide by, don't even talk about JIT because the most one person can create is a tree-walk JS interpreter
      if you really want JavaScript support in that theoretical browser you would need to use either V8 or SpiderMonkey which are both huge monoliths that are difficult to compile

    • @VinnyUnion
      @VinnyUnion 8 месяцев назад +3

      I don't think that monopoly is feasible in the grand scheme of things. Even chrome might become a relic in the distant future.

    • @akeem2983
      @akeem2983 7 месяцев назад

      Such browser does exist - GNOME Web, it doesn't depend on Chromium or Firefox, instead it's built on WebKit like Safari and Chromium. It's very lightweight and works great, but many websites that don't have an idea that this browser exists may break. Which exposes the main problem - Chromium is so widespread, on many occasions web developers don't support anything except for in, de-facto current web standard is literally "it should work on Chromium", so creating and maintaining independent browsers is extremely hard

    • @ceoofkrankenwagen
      @ceoofkrankenwagen 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@konnorj6442Not brave because 1) it's chromium based 2) b. eich is homophobe

  • @johnnykeys1978
    @johnnykeys1978 2 месяца назад

    Google recommended chrome so that's how I know it's corrupt, criminal, and thus against the terms and service of being on my computer.

  • @scotthullinger4684
    @scotthullinger4684 3 месяца назад +1

    Firefox CONSTANTLY gets improved and is FAR MORE desirable than all other browsers.
    Firefox won't tie up computer resources unnecessarily, and isn't a lead brick like Chrome is, which also spies on you, just like internet explorer also spies on you. Chromium isn't much different. Brave browser is also very nice, but it may be just a bit too simplistic.