Spyke
lemm.ee

I wouldn't dismiss this just yet. Mozilla has already been doing some open source AI work, specifically their speech offerings. If they invest in these and they get better I think we all stand to gain from having good text to speech and speech recognition available outside of Apple/Amazon/Microsoft/Google

66

Also my understanding is they’d use AI for local language translation so it doesn’t have to connect to some external server to do it.

Just cause for-profit organizations are heavily pushing AI doesn’t mean there aren’t unskeezy uses for it…

30

Im so sick of AI being inserted into every inane thing. Next it will be AI lego, AI gaming chair, AI toilet seat. Its just so fucking droll at this point. There is literally no technology I want to use less than your idiot pet AI project you just came up with. Everything now has AI in it yet nothing feels revolutionary or interesting. Its all just worse. Everything is just worse but with AI in it. Its just CEOs piling shit on top of shit on top of shit and expecting something beautiful to come out the other end. Drives me nuts.

21

The worst part is they still barely understand how to get AI to actually do anything. So it's always just "yo dawg, we heard you like ChatGPT, so we put ChatGPT in your car so you can chat while you drive"

7

The only good use I can think of is generating simple readable summaries of ad and picture heavy pages.

A bit like spam filters, to make the Web usable.

Could be an advantage similar to what Opera had in olden days.

5
FaceDeerreply
kbin.social

Or "fresh new CEO without baggage who sees where the future of the technology is heading."

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Shadywackreply
lemmy.world

More like “new CEO knows how to chase the latest shiny fad”

Where tech is going, that couldn’t be more absurd. When you’re done bootlicking, that taste takes a while to clear out.

22
lemm.ee

Compared to the blockchain type train, I thought this whole AI thing was quite cool and actually useful, but it feels more and more similar to the blockchain hype, where companies tried to solve every problem with some form of blockchain (for example in-game items).

The same is kind of happening with AI now.

69
hootreply
lemmy.ca

Define "a lot"? Or better yet, sources?

-7
s0ckpuppetreply
kbin.social

Yeah I don’t know why it’s a surprise to anyone that NFT losers are now morphing into AI losers. It’s a bunch of talentless hacks trying to get rich quick through the lowest possible input of effort. Bonus points that they get to annoy a lot of people in the process.

12
Croquettereply
sh.itjust.works

Yeah, but if you buy my course, and not the 100 000 courses, I will show you how to get rich, just like me! The other 100 000 courses don't know my secret. But for 2000$, I will tell you my secret.

What's 2000$ when you will be a millionaire soon?

1

The same is kind of happening with AI now.

Time and time again a certain intellectual category of people believes that they have found perpetuum mobile in their lives.

And some others make money on that, of course.

2

It's just to boost investor confidence. It'll take a few years before it dies down, the true value is understood and the next buzzword takes hold. Sad state of tech these days. Many grifters, many more losers.

1
jbkreply
discuss.tchncs.de

Guess what, the local private translations feature depends on AI/ML. All this blind hate for AI is so stupid.

18

What is wrong with companies showing that they do work with this kind of stuff. They probably do already but they are just letting the people know that they do and it just happened the word AI sends that message. Though Mozilla downsizing is a bad thing and the job loss would be a valid reason. But from the thread I'm not seeing that kind of atmosphere here.

4
kbin.social

Edit: I'm going to rephrase this so as not to divert it on the misinterpretation of a particular case.

Librewolf doesn't check anything, it just applies patches automatically. That's why sometimes bugs happen, like corrupting the user profiles of all flatpak users a year ago; entirely the fault of librewolf for not updating a line of code, and not of any third party.

6
lemm.ee

If you read into it, it was because the users Software Manager chose to downgrade from v108 > v107. I wouldn’t knock this on the Librewolf team, although I don’t use it, so there could be other issues I wouldn’t know about.

10
Ploppreply
lemmy.world

Absolutely, but probably not until they have figured out how to make soft androids.

24
lemmy.zip

You'll still have to wash it and maintenance it after, eh, spikes in usage.

5
lemmy.world

You know, I’m surprised they haven’t launched a paid for, privacy centric email service like Proton or FastMail. They can give basic service for free and then charge a nominal fee for more storage like the others do. It seems like a simple way to drum up some revenue and rely a little less on the payment from Google.

25
shadowreply
lemmy.sdf.org

From everything I've heard about running a reliable and trustworthy email service, it sounds like a fucking nightmare. I'm glad to pay something like proton to handle it for me.

7

Yep and making basic accounts free means that you either have to cripple them, ad-finance the whole thing, and/or sell private data.

A posteo account costs an euro a month and even if you don't care about your privacy it's one of the places you can be sure of to not shut down or alter the deal: A euro is sustainable for them and it means that you're a customer, not the product.

1

Wouldn't really consider Fastmail privacy centric, but Proton sure. And a definite step up from Gmail.

3
ukfli.uk

Isn't Thunderbird completely self-managed? I don't think they have anything to do with MozCorp.

26
lemmy.world

Welp, using the internet was fun while it lasted. I'll still use Firefox for all my browsing until I can't anymore and after that I guess I'll go fuck myself for entertainment instead of internet browsing.

13

This is the best summary I could come up with:


After installing a new interim CEO earlier this month, Mozilla, the organization behind the Firefox browser, is making some major changes to its product strategy, TechCrunch has learned.

Specifically, Mozilla plans to scale back its investment in a number of products, including its VPN, Relay and, somewhat remarkably, its Online Footprint Scrubber, which launched only a week ago.

Going forward, the company said in an internal memo, Mozilla will focus on bringing “trustworthy AI into Firefox.” To do so, it will bring together the teams that work on Pocket, Content and AI/Ml.

Mozilla started expanding its product portfolio in recent years, all while its flagship product, Firefox, kept losing market share.

And while the organization was often sharply criticized for this, its leadership argued that diversifying its product portfolio beyond Firefox was necessary to ensure Mozilla’s survival in the long run.

Firefox, after all, provided the vast majority of Mozilla’s income, but it also meant the organization was essentially dependent on Google to continue this deal.


The original article contains 234 words, the summary contains 166 words. Saved 29%. I'm a bot and I'm open source!

9