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posted by cmn32480 on Saturday April 02 2016, @03:57PM   Printer-friendly
from the seems-very-one-sided dept.

According to Softpedia:

Software in the Public Interest, Inc. (SPI), publisher of Debian™ GNU/Linux and Debian™ GNU/kFreeBSD™ has reached an agreement in its longstanding trade dress dispute with the Mozilla Corporation, publisher of the Firefox application suite. Under the agreement, SPI will pay an undisclosed sum to the Mozilla Corp. and periodically turn over marketing data regarding SPI's customers. In exchange, SPI will receive a nonexclusive license to distribute the Firefox suite as part of SPI's Debian™ products.

SPI agreed not to alter the branding of the Firefox suite; not to disable its Pocket integration; not to alter the suite's anti-phishing or search features, which are sponsored by Mozilla Corp. partners; and to discontinue its competing Iceweasel Web suite, which is based on Mozilla Corp. software licensed under a previous accord. The Firefox suite will be provided to SPI's Debian™ customers as an automatic update via the firm's Dpkg℠ service. The updates will go out over the course of the next three months to groups of randomly selected customers, in order to provide what SPI calls "a superior upgrade experience."


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  • (Score: 2) by fritsd on Saturday April 02 2016, @05:48PM

    by fritsd (4586) on Saturday April 02 2016, @05:48PM (#326164) Journal

    Any suggestions? I'm just used to iceweasel.

    A browser that doesn't puke up in enforcing mode would also be nice to have.

    Starting Score:    1  point
    Karma-Bonus Modifier   +1  

    Total Score:   2  
  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday April 02 2016, @06:53PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday April 02 2016, @06:53PM (#326197)

    Currently HTML 4.01 with CSS 2.1 support and duktape as the javascript engine, written entirely in C.

    It is lacking in all the hooks needed for modern browser privacy, but is a much smaller and cleaner codebase to work from (the entire source tree is 3-6 megs), it supports tabs, can run in ~64-96 megs of ram, and can probably render SN just fine (I have only tried it with the green site, trying to find out how well it tolerates modern JS sites.)

    netsurf-browser.org

    Go check it out!

    • (Score: 2) by maxwell demon on Saturday April 02 2016, @07:21PM

      by maxwell demon (1608) Subscriber Badge on Saturday April 02 2016, @07:21PM (#326202) Journal

      It is lacking in all the hooks needed for modern browser privacy,

      Then it's not a viable replacement for Firefox.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
  • (Score: 2) by hendrikboom on Saturday April 02 2016, @09:12PM

    by hendrikboom (1125) on Saturday April 02 2016, @09:12PM (#326243) Homepage Journal

    I just switched from Chrome to iceweasel because Google dropped support for chrome. I'm not sure why they did this. Perhaps it got so bloated that a 32-bit address space wasn't enough any more?

    I tried switching to Midori but had a few problems with it.

    (1) I couldn't figure out how to transfer my bookmarks.

    (2) When I used it to look at my own filesystem (using file://) it did not alphabetise my directory listings. It took forever for me to find specific files there. I don't even care much about which alphabetical order they use.

    Now maybe there re easy fixes for these problems, but I couldn't find them. Nor could I find a user-support mailing list, where users could help each other and the solutions would stay around in archives.

    Otherwise, Midori seems a pleasant enough browser.

    I managed to get my bookmarks transferred to iceweasel.

    -- hendrik

  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by Unixnut on Saturday April 02 2016, @10:32PM

    by Unixnut (5779) on Saturday April 02 2016, @10:32PM (#326268)

    I don't know, I personally started using Chromium for certain modern sites. For everything else I went back to seamonkey. Using Shell bindings I can load one of three profiles:

    1. General browsing
    2. Facebook (I hate it, but most of family & friends are on it)
    3. Unixnut handle
    4. Anonymous (this profile is deleted after exit, so each time you run it you get a fresh profile)

    Each one has its own settings, its own cookie store, and its own temp dir. So the facebook profile knows nothing about me except what is in fb. It cannot access the other profiles.

    This is good enough for my privacy, quite frankly.