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27 votes
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Mozilla: The greatest tech company left behind
30 votes -
I am a Mozilla employee, AMAA
Hi everybody, happy Friday! I am Aaron Klotz, a Staff Software Engineer on the GeckoView team at Mozilla Corporation. I have worked at Mozilla since the fall of 2012 and have worked on three...
Hi everybody, happy Friday! I am Aaron Klotz, a Staff Software Engineer on the GeckoView team at Mozilla Corporation.
I have worked at Mozilla since the fall of 2012 and have worked on three different teams across that time: Performance, Platform Integration & Security Hardening, and finally GeckoView.
Given the recent news about layoffs, I thought it might be cathartic to do an AMA to share my experiences at Mozilla and try to set the record straight the best that I can. I would not dare try this in other forums, but since the Tildes community is capable of civil discussion, I'll do it here! I provided some proof a long time ago when I first joined Tildes, and I'd like to think that many people in this community are willing to vouch for me at this point, but if you want more, I can add it.
Obviously I cannot discuss issues that are covered by my NDA (but fortunately most issues are not covered), and some details I might want to avoid out of sensitivity for people who were laid off. AMAA!
EDIT 1: Also to make clear (if it wasn't obvious): These opinions are mine and mine alone, do not reflect the opinion of any Mozilla entity, etc. etc.
EDIT 2: I'm logging off for the night, but I'll try to follow up throughout the weekend if I have time. Thanks for all the questions! Hopefully I've cleared up some things for you!
EDIT 3: Okay, I think I've gone through the other questions asked over the weekend, but I'm going to stop now! Thanks for your interest! Now, I've got a mobile browser to help build!
98 votes -
Mozilla signs fresh Google search deal worth mega-millions as 25% staff cut hits Servo, MDN, security teams
16 votes -
Their Tube - Experience how the YouTube home page would look for six different personas
22 votes -
Ameelio, a startup backed by the Mozilla's 'Fix the Internet', aims to provide free video calls and messaging to prisoners in the US where video calls can cost as much as $25 for 15min
11 votes -
Costs/funding in open-source languages
6 votes -
Firefox has started enabling DNS-over-HTTPS by default for all US-based users
33 votes -
Firefox will start deprecating TLS 1.0 and 1.1 with Firefox 74, releasing on March 10, 2020
16 votes -
Add-on support was just merged into Firefox Preview
@aissn: Add-on support was just merged into Firefox Preview. Thanks @gabrielluong https://t.co/cXOCB00tKk
23 votes -
Thunderbird's new home
11 votes -
Diary of an engine diversity absolutist
7 votes -
Mozilla lays off seventy as it waits for new products to generate revenue
27 votes -
Firefox 72.0 release notes
13 votes -
Firefox Private Network
30 votes -
Firefox 71.0 has been released
21 votes -
What half of iPhone users don’t know about their privacy
18 votes -
Give Firefox a chance for a faster, calmer and distraction-free internet
27 votes -
ISPs lied to Congress to spread confusion about encrypted DNS, Mozilla says
15 votes -
Firefox to hide notification popups by default starting next year
22 votes -
Firefox 70 has been released
39 votes -
Moving Firefox to a faster four-week release cycle
10 votes -
Coil, Mozilla, and Creative Commons have launched Grant for the Web, a $100 million fund to invest in reshaping the economics of the web
19 votes -
Configuring networks to disable DNS over HTTPS
8 votes -
Firefox’s test pilot program returns with Firefox Private Network beta
11 votes -
Firefox 69.0 released
22 votes -
Mozilla’s Manifest v3 FAQ
5 votes -
Mozilla CEO Chris Beard will step down at the end of 2019
18 votes -
Mozilla takes action to protect users in Kazakhstan
26 votes -
All Tridactyl installations might get removed by Firefox on Aug 21
12 votes -
As authoritarian governments surveil the internet, open source projects decide how to respond
7 votes -
MDN (beta) is now built with React
6 votes -
Add-Ons Outage Post-Mortem Result
13 votes -
Testing Picture-in-Picture for videos in Firefox 69 Beta and Developer Edition
12 votes -
Firefox 68 released
32 votes -
UK ISP group names Mozilla 'Internet Villain' for supporting 'DNS-over-HTTPS'
34 votes -
Mozilla CEO: Paid, premium features for Firefox coming this fall
66 votes -
Reinventing Firefox for Android: a Preview
40 votes -
Firefox: The evolution of a brand
13 votes -
Firefox 67 released - Updates focused on performance and privacy
23 votes -
Mozilla Firefox Preview, new Firefox browser, is available on Google Play
18 votes -
Mozilla Research Call: Tune up Tor for Integration and Scale
6 votes -
Firefox bug: All extensions disabled due to expiration of intermediate signing cert
64 votes -
Technical details on the recent Firefox add-on outage
11 votes -
Firefox 66.0.4 has been released - fixes disabled extensions/add-ons
16 votes -
It’s Complicated: Mozilla’s 2019 Internet Health Report
8 votes -
Former Mozilla exec: Google has sabotaged Firefox for years
50 votes -
Protections against fingerprinting and cryptocurrency mining available in Firefox Nightly and Beta
16 votes -
Today’s Firefox release aims to reduce your online annoyances
38 votes -
How secure and private is Firefox?
I was browsing r/privacy today and I came across this guy going on about how Mozilla was just pretending to be privacy focused. Here's his comment. Now I don't really know what to think of this,...
I was browsing r/privacy today and I came across this guy going on about how Mozilla was just pretending to be privacy focused. Here's his comment. Now I don't really know what to think of this, and frankly, I'm getting really exhausted of hearing about how all the things I'm using aren't actually trustworthy. So can so someone put my mind to rest? Does this guy's claims have any truth to them? Thanks.
20 votes