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Firefox Commercial Contest

Robbyboy writes "Mozilla announced an advertisment contest for the Firefox web browser, according to Information Week. They are asking Mozilla Fans to send them samples and the winners will receive prizes. The Contest is hosted at the Spread Firefox site" From the article: "Earlier this month, Mozilla launched the first phase of its Firefox Flicks campaign, which was a testimonial Web site in which fans could sing the browser's praise in short videos. To date, several dozen of the amateur clips, which vary widely in quality and have been submitted from more than 20 countries, have been posted on the site."

13 of 112 comments (clear)

  1. i hope... by know1 · · Score: 4, Funny

    ....that they do an out takes / freaks release a la viral advert style that can't be traced to them. everyone knows those reality tv shows that are talent contests are funniest when the contestants fail

  2. humour is key by eobanb · · Score: 5, Insightful

    seriously guys. how do you make something as arcane as auto insurance rates funny? you do it like Geico does. fact is, most people don't find what web browser they're using a terribly fascinating subject either. it might be hard for a lot of slashdotters to swallow, but one of the best ways to get people talking about Firefox is not throwing statistics at them or preaching about open source software. it's proper marketing. this is one of the reasons why Firefox has succeeded reasonably well so far versus, say, Opera. webmasters have 'get firefox' buttons on the bottoms of their web pages. taking it more mainstream would just be easiest, in my opinion, if a bit of humour was thrown in. i can't imagine what exactly it would be, but if you can make car insurance funny, you can make web standards funny too.

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    1. Re:humour is key by rtb61 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You think out of the box i.e. create a branding kit so that ISP's can readily rebrand firefox to be an ISP branded web browser (with a range of bookmarks and extensions etc. than have an affiliation with the ISP). Give larger commercial organisations an incentive to distribute and promote firefox. The ISP's can then use firefox and thunderbird to compete against MSN and AOL.

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    2. Re:humour is key by cashman73 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Oh, my god! I've got really great news!!!! I just saved a whole bunch of my sanity by switching my web browser to Firefox!!!!

  3. Firefox strikes back... by Ruff_ilb · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I find this a much better idea than the opera-user-photo concept. I hope they release all the best submissions. They could be quite amusing.

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  4. My Vision by bensafrickingenius · · Score: 5, Funny

    Involves thousands of paniced Japanese running through city streets screaming "MOZIRRA!!!!!! MOZIRRA!!!"

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  5. Great firefox advertising idea by commodoresloat · · Score: 4, Funny

    Post multiple copies of the same story about the Firefox contest!

  6. freedom is key too by H4x0r+Jim+Duggan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    > preaching about open source software

    I agree that preaching must be avoided, but not mentioning that it is free software is a false economy.

    People who don't value their freedom will let it slip through their fingers. i.e. they will install a bunch of proprietary plug-ins, and over time, Firefox will become a platform for a set of non-free plug-ins for browsing the non-free WWW.

    ...but the preaching has to be removed. Freedom and community could be mentioned without an explanation, and at least the user would then have the option of investigating for themself.

    In business terms, freedom is the software's "unique selling point".

    1. Re:freedom is key too by Short+Circuit · · Score: 5, Insightful

      People don't value their freedoms.

      Cases in point: Gun control, DMCA, PATRIOT Act, Copyright extensions, broadcast flag (you know it's going to pass), DRM (Sony's rootkit wouldn't have gotten press if it didn't introduce security holes), All those bits of PATRIOT II that got slipped into other bills...the list would go on and on if I had bothered to divide DRM and gun control into passed and pending legislation.

      All you have to do is tug on their heartstrings, or put the fear of death in them, and they'll support whatever agenda you propose.

      It's political micro-minorities and activist groups that end up defending their own rights. The "silent majority" doesn't silently support or silently oppose; It just doesn't care. :-(

      Check back in 20 years, and see if I'm not right.

  7. Browsers are still cool by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm going to momentarily set aside the fact that this guy is a total nitwit, and pretend that an enlightened and rational person has raised that objection. Why do people care? Why would anyone spend time shilling for a free product, when doing so cuts into their porn-browsing time? In short, who gives a rat?

    To answer the question, look back just a couple of years. IE had around 95% marketshare, despite not having done anything terribly interesting to improve the browser since it killed Netscape. Microsoft wasn't working towards supporting new, useful standards like CSS, XML, SVG, RSS, etc., because the incentives just weren't there. MSHTML was the standard, because there was no market for anything else. Security was awful, but the people who made the software just didn't care. Seriously, how much pride can you take in "doing things the right way," when you know for certain that the people developing for your browser will whine, complain, then find whatever dirty hack it takes to get things looking right on your browser?

    Times have changed, and it's thanks in large part to the creation of Firefox and the Evangelical Geek Hordes swarming behind it. IE has lost a good chunk of marketshare, lazy webmasters are starting to understand that their website needs to work on multiple browsers. There is renewed interest in web standards.

    Even IE is starting to improve its security and standards-compliance, while adding new features.

    Before Firefox arrived, Internet Explorer was well on its way to becoming the MSWeb. Microsoft could decide which standards they thought were relevant to the user experience they wanted us to have, and to what extent they would be implemented. But since this power didn't translate well to revenue streams, they gave us the half-baked, annoying web browsing experience that they couldn't get us to pay for.

    So long as alternative browsers have double-digit usage, the web will continue to be a more standards-friendly place. Standards don't sound terribly exciting at first, but they allow for all sorts of exciting niftiness that simply wouldn't be possible under a MS monoculture.

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  8. Okay, I've GOT IT! by mister_llah · · Score: 4, Funny

    What about a jar of jelly, but instead of jelly, it says FIREFOX... ahahha SPREAD FIREFOX, GET IT? ...

    Anyway, if someone takes this idea, does it, and wins... well, at least think of me when you get your delicious prizes...

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  9. Re:when did this become about domination? by TedRiot · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Good products need advertising to make them known. I like and use Firefox, but I don't feel I have to push it to anyone even though I consider myself "technically clued-in". When people have problems with eg. malware after surfing in suspicious parts of the web, I tell them about problems with IE and if they ask for alternatives, I might direct them to Firefox. I don't push it to people that have no problems with IE and are not looking for alternatives.

    Having ads in mainstream media makes a product more known and makes the product (in some cases at least) more credible to your average consumer. This might make a new population of people that realise that they have a choice and may become interested. For those I am willing to tell that in my experience it's actually a very functional browser.

  10. One problem... by mrjb · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...the Mozilla team has Adblock switched on. No winner will be announced.

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