To disable it in about:config

browser.search.serpEventTelemetry.enabled  =  false	
browser.search.serpEventTelemetryCategorization.enabled  =  false
  • Vincent@feddit.nl
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    2 months ago

    So which organisation with many userse serves the needs of their users better without collecting data?

    • kbal@fedia.io
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      2 months ago

      Most free software does not have telemetry, and when it does it’s almost always opt-in. Firefox is the one major exception to that rule.

      • Vincent@feddit.nl
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        2 months ago

        Hmm, so what user-facing free software is at Firefox’s scale? I think Ubuntu has telemetry, for example (though I think they even have fewer users).

        • kbal@fedia.io
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          2 months ago

          Ubuntu telemetry is fairly minimal, as of last time I used it a few years ago. Not remotely comparable to what firefox does. They just want to know what hardware you have, there’s no user behaviour tracking, and it’s fully opt-in (you have to deliberately turn it on when installing). KDE and Gnome have a little something like that as well now, I think. Almost everything else does not.

          Debian has a list (last updated 2023-10) of software among the 97000 packages they distribute which have been found to violate user privacy by “phoning home” for telemetry or other purposes:

          • gnome-calculator - fetches currencies
          • Firefox - multiple issues
          • Thunderbird - opt-out telemetry that is not yet patched for Debian
          • Chromium - phones home in various ways
          • syncthing - version check and lots more
          • cura - phones home in various ways, patched out in Debian
          • azure-cli - collects “anonymous” telemetry by default
          • glances - connects to several online services to discover public IP
          • webext-bulk-media-downloader - loads the website and sends version info
          • Golang - planning on implementing enabled-by-default telemetry
          • Vincent@feddit.nl
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            2 months ago

            there’s no user behaviour tracking

            I mean, that depends on how you define user behaviour. It tracks which packages are frequently installed, for example, or how often people install Ubuntu in the first place. All of which I think is pretty legit, in my opinion, since that only involves aggregate user statistics that help prioritise work and detect common problems - but that’s essentially what Firefox is doing too.

            Debian is a great example of relatively commonly used free software that doesn’t really collect data btw.