If you are concerned about PPA aka Privacy-Preserving Attribution in Firefox, please take a deep breath, and then read https://www.reddit.com/r/firefox/comments/1e43w7v/a_word_about_private_attribution_in_firefox/
It's posted on Reddit to make it easy for folks to engage in conversations. So I invite you to participate there if you want to. But please remember that Mozilla Employees with a fancy green badge on that subreddit are humans, too. :8bitheart:
@denschub If you’re not a logged in reddit user, you can only see the op and a few comments. Not a super way for everyone to see and participate.
@denschub
Human to human, you're getting #slaughtered in the comments cuz you're arguing on behalf of #Mozilla, defending an #indefensible position for #firefox changes. Some #PTSD is possible from the discourse.
The incentives for the CEO & CTO, paid $millions & responsible for the org as a whole are completely different from those for you as an individual.
The best option for you, IMHO, is to recognize when your employer's policies are problematic and simply not engage the #public.
@denschub
Bottom line: adding #ppa as an opt out feature without proactively informing their users was a dick move.
The non apology that followed does nothing to alleviate that slight or restore trust. The whole thing is a communication and public policy failure.
#Mozilla is just another company releasing a product we have to continually check and be wary of. That shit is tiresome and it’s extremely disappointing from them.
They can wipe that lie about respecting privacy off their website.