I haven't yet seen a campaign responding to this. Integrating a
single, proprietary product in this way seems a first for Mozilla.
Not only is it a closed and non-free 3rd-party service, there is
apparently no way to pick an alternate like there is with the
default search engine. Even if the integrated Pocket were to be
disabled by default, thus requiring the user to explicitly choose
it, it wouldn't be kosher, unless of course the result is Pocket
embracing Mozilla's purported principles for all of its code.
Secondly, the recent addition of sharing services (for Tumblr,
Twitter, etc.) would seem to be where Pocket belongs, so that it is
up to the user to set it up.
Such integration indicates to me that Mozilla is on the path of
"competitive business decisions" while still distinguishing itself
as a champion of freedom and openness.
On 06/12/2015 10:51 AM, Mike Gerwitz wrote:
Has anyone seen any useful campaigns against
Mozilla's integration of
Pocket? It's distributed with Firefox and is a third-party
service that
is not only proprietary (in the sense that I cannot host my own
instance
of it), but also serves proprietary _javascript_.
Recent response from them here:
http://venturebeat.com/2015/06/09/mozilla-responds-to-firefox-user-backlash-over-pocket-integration/
Perhaps the FSF would be interested in calling them out, along the
same
lines as they did with Adobe and EME (although those are more
fundamental issues). I'd be willing to write something up.
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