Narcis Garcia said: > You can use M.Firefox in MS/Windows, and you will enjoy the same advantages.
Except for that fact that Mozilla Firefox is not free software. What makes it non-free, you ask? I refer you back to the four basic freedoms. For a program to be free you must be able to use all four freedoms on a commercial of non-commercial basis [0]. That's an important part: Commercial and non-commercial use must be treated entirely equally. Mozilla does not allow freedom #2 on a commercial basis, rendering Mozilla-branded copies non-free [1]. Recommending that someone use a non-free program is probably not a good idea. [0] http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html [1] http://lists.nongnu.org/archive/html/gnu-linux-libre/2011-08/msg00014.html
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