- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
In order to measure the user experience, Firefox collects a wide range of anonymized timing metrics related to page load, responsiveness, startup and other aspects of browser performance. Collecting data while holding ourselves to the highest standards of privacy can be challenging. For example, because we rely on aggregated metrics, we lack the ability to pinpoint data from any particular website. But perhaps even more challenging is analyzing the data once collected and drawing actionable conclusions. In the future we’ll talk more about these challenges and how we’re addressing them, but in this post we’d like to share how some of the metrics that are fundamental to how our users experience the browser have improved throughout the year.
Firefox: uses telemetry to improve performance
Lemmybrains:
Most loud mouth opensource/privacy enthusiasts:
-
Never contribute anything to any project
-
Gets triggered and repeats regurgitated stuff every time “tracking/ad” is mentioned even when they are anonymous and have valid use cases
-
Has no solutions to any problems, just buzzwords
-
Always complain on open source projects for being shit
-
Wants someone else to work for free to fix their annoyances
-
Wants feature parity and more with commercial alternatives
-
Rinse and repeat
-
Telemetry is how we got here origanlly… These companies broke the trust, I don’t share shit.
Nothing against FF has been using since before faceberg. But I use forks now since telemetry is a no no spot got me
deleted by creator
It’s a shame the mobile firefox is such a flaming turd in comparison. Can’t imagine using anything else on desktop bit they made me switch to cromite. And the devs gaslight you if you complain about the degenerate ui issues on firefox mobile. I wish there was firefox sync for chromite
If you dont mind updating manually Icraven is a pretty good port. It’s on GitHub but they are working on a Fdroid release