I had been wondering about if it had been added in yet. I already knew that
Ice cat/A-Browser where clean (it would be somewhat worring if they where
not),
I'm more worried for other users that care about proprietary formats yet not
in the 100% free software camp.
http://ebb.org/bkuhn/blog/2014/05/14/to-serve-users.html
Indeed, I'm looking/waiting to see when a DRM free version will pop up. I'm
already firmly in the A-browser/Ice Cat camp here but just for everyone
else's sake I hope an easy solution is produced soon.
DRM hasn't been added to Firefox yet, so Abrowser/IceCat are already
DRM-free. Once Firefox adds EME (and I haven't read anything about it since
the initial announcement) Abrowser/IceCat will of course be made DRM-free.
Yeah, Mozilla goes downhill fast. But as long as firefox remains free
software we have kind of a weapon against it.
Don't be too quick.
We shouldn't just think about the trisquel users; people expect a piece of
free software such as firefox not to have this anti-feature and it is enabled
by default on a debian system I'm currently running.
It seems that Firefox has a preference on its about:config page
called browser.safebrowsing.appRepURL which, according to the
author of the article, is responsible for sending data about the
downloaded files to Google. This can be fixed just by removing
the value (by double clicking on it and
SafeBrowsing is disabled by default, so it's not a problem.
SafeBrowsing should be renamed to GoogleBrowsing.
*sign* It worries me that a group such as Mozilla appear to slowly sliding
into a den of privacy and freedom issues that they appear to promote as being
a strong point of the platform.
First it was caving to DRM requirements and now it is this. Yes it is not
active for a lot of people but
10 matches
Mail list logo