Everyone,

Maybe as a compromise, Mozilla (Firefox) could tie the pop-up to the
first use of the security feature and not to the start of the application.
This way distributions that didn't want the pop-up could disable the
features in the default configuration before firefox starts.  And when
the user enabled the security feature the pop-up is back.

The EULA also would need to be trimmed as stated before in this tread to
 simply provide the required information about the privacy and the
purposes of the new services being enabled.

James

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