> Firefox itself lost trust when Mozilla tried to push the new Terms of Use earlier this year.
Those terms of use aren't in place any longer. I'm surprised that listening to the users is viewed as something bad.
> Firefox itself lost trust when Mozilla tried to push the new Terms of Use earlier this year.
Those terms of use aren't in place any longer. I'm surprised that listening to the users is viewed as something bad.
This. Their devs and reactivity to their user base kept my trust.
Their marketing and legal departments lost it long before the terms of service debacle.
Rolling back a change that causes loss of user trust does not automatically restore that trust. It takes time and ongoing public commitment to regain that trust.
Allowing that ToS change is what put them on the spyware list, not rolling it back.