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posted by martyb on Saturday November 22 2014, @05:46AM   Printer-friendly
from the should-name-a-search-engine:-"Sir Ch" dept.

Mozilla announced a change to their strategy for Firefox search partnerships. They are ending the practice of having a single global default search provider. Instead, the default search provider would be determined by location in the following ways:

  • United States: Yahoo (new five year deal), who would support the Do Not Track setting in Firefox
  • Russia: Yandex
  • China: Baidu

Google - together with Bing, DuckDuckGo, and other (depending on location) will continue to be a pre-installed search option. While not a default search provider, Google is not fully out - they will continue to power the Safe Browsing and Geolocation features of Firefox.

 
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  • (Score: 2) by melikamp on Saturday November 22 2014, @07:40AM

    by melikamp (1886) on Saturday November 22 2014, @07:40AM (#118717) Journal
    IMHO, the interface is annoying, and I have no hope that web masters will do anything in response to nagging. But mostly, I think the way javascript is used by both web masters and web users makes it impossible to tell which software is free. Why should I trust boilerplate if I cannot trust the source? And if I trust that the source will only serve free software, why do I need boilerplate? Hence the only effective way to deal with the "javascript trap" is authenticating and white-listing domains I trust, and that's what NoScript + HTTPS do for me. LibreJS is superfluous.
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