Julien Voisin blogs:
Today, I updated my Firefox, and had a new icon on my toolbar: pocket. I took at quick look at the ToS and privacy policy; here is my tl;dr:
Read it Later, Inc. is collecting a lot of intimate information and is tracking you.
When you share something through Pocket with a friend, the emails contains spying material using malware-like techniques to track your friends.
They are sharing those information with trusted third parties (Could be anyone they are doing business with.).
The policy might change, and it's your responsibility to check Pocket's website to see if it has.
[...] The Pocket implementation is not an extension (while it was available as an extension), it's implemented in Firefox. You can not remove it, only disable it, by going in about:config, since this option is not available in the preferences menu.
What the hell is pocket? on Mozilla's site:
The Pocket for Firefox button lets you save web pages and videos to Pocket in just one click. Pocket strips away clutter and saves the page in a clean, distraction-free view and lets you access them on the go through the Pocket app. All you need is a free account, an Internet connection and the Pocket button.
(Score: 3, Insightful) by Rosco P. Coltrane on Monday July 13 2015, @01:53PM
Programmed obsolescence my friend...
Older versions of the browser still work fine, but web pages are slowly becoming unviewable on them because they're designed to be viewed with newer browser features.
There's nothing earth-shatteringly novel in web browsing that requires these newer features most of the times, but if you want to keep viewing certain websites, you have to switch to the latest and not-so-greatest bloatware-du-jour. That's the problem I'm having more and more often with Palemoon - which is basically a cleaned-up, older version of Firefox.