Spyke
firefox·FirefoxbyWispy2891

Yay! Now we get ads in shared links!

By default now Firefox for Android shares an extra link with TRACKING for advertising itself. This is the features that everyone loves.

Ok, buried in the menu there's an option to disable this shit. But it's infuriating that a "please spam my friends and track the opening rate of my links" option is enabled by default

View original on lemmy.world
lemmy.sdf.org

I'm currently more perturbed by the headline about them nerfing HEVC functionality.

22

Hey in a $1500 laptop there aren't enough margins for paying 4 cents of royalties

23
semreply
piefed.blahaj.zone

I didn't think it was Mozilla doing that. It was laptop manufacturers.

3
lemmy.zip

I don't get it. I'm not seeing the same thing, and I can't find any reference of anyone else reporting the same issue online either. Either this isn't an accurate report, or it's some very specific A/B testing. I can't find any options in settings that mention this functionality either.

20

According to another comment by OP, it only happens when they share a link to WhatsApp from Firefox.

6
lemmy.blahaj.zone

This is where the forks come in. Ironfox on android is what Librewolf is to Windows/Mac/Linux.

11

It's not as hardened (which can be a good or bad thing if your priorities are ease of use vs. privacy), but it's a debloated fork of Firefox, so it should be fine.

7

I've been using Waterfox for months and it works just like Firefox did. It has no AI features. It would be nice if it would offer to import you ff profile.

3
Wispy2891reply
lemmy.world

Firefox. They detect when you are sharing on WhatsApp and inject the tracking link (when sharing to other apps it doesn’t happen)

3
lemmy.world

Interesting. I didn't know that they could tell where something is shared to. I generally just copy things but I also basically never use WhatsApp so that might be why I haven't seen this.

7

I don't see the option to disable that on my device. OP, do you have "studies" enabled? In settings, check Data collection > Install and run studies. Maybe it's listed there.

5
Wispy2891reply
lemmy.world

it's firefox for android (google play build) 145.0.1 build 2016126887 (18th November 2:22:23) and i found out now that the option "install and run studies" in "data collection" is enabled (it's opt-out and I was not aware of that)

3
lemmy.dbzer0.com

I guess you turned the studies off now? Is the option for these inserted links still present?

I hope it was indeed just a study, and if so that the devs will get the memo because this is some serious bullshit...

1
Wispy2891reply
lemmy.world

Yes now the option it's completely gone from the settings, even the menu where it was hidden is gone

1

I wonder if, with all the Firefox clones and the header scramblers, the usage percentages aren't quite as bleak compared to chromium based browsers.

2
social.vivaldi.net

@Wispy2891 Whatever it takes for Firefox to stay afloat......as long as it respects my privacy, I will put up with ads. I feel like Mozilla is a sinking ship.

0
just2lookreply
lemmy.zip

How is a tracked link at all privacy respecting?

22

Yeah, wtf, it's additionally ridiculous because it contradicts FF's own option to copy links without tracking info, which they implemented recently.

1

Its a unique link that Mozilla knows is tied to your device, and can see what devices open the link. That is pretty invasive tracking.

5
ReedReadsreply
lemmy.zip

It’s a simple toggle in the settings menu to turn on/off. The people who care about privacy will toggle it off.

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just2lookreply
lemmy.zip

If it defaults to off, that's fine. I'm tired of constantly having to go into settings for everything to see if they added some invasive bullshit.

10
Drusasreply
fedia.io

It defaults to on. You can disable it under Settings > Advanced > Link sharing

1

I assumed it defaulted to on. I use Vanadium on mobile, and don't use WhatsApp. So I wasn't going to try to check.

I just meant that defaulting to off is the only way 'features' like this are even remotely acceptable.

2
Toxuinreply
lemmy.ca

Ah, “just a prank bro” argument. This is how ANTI-privacy corporations erode the level of expectations. Firefox, as a privacy advocate should absolutely NOT do that. If the choice is between being respectful of your users and being dead - I’d rather see it dead. We already have Microsoft Edge and a dozen other bs browsers that treat us like cattle. I think the general sentiment is that Firefox does not do that - or was not supposed to, anyway.

3

I never made an argument or said said it was a prank.

FF gives users a choice. It is our choice to make, not theirs. To me, that is respecting their users.

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