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Mozilla Reponds - We Call the Shots, Not Google.

An anonymous reader writes "Recent articles in the New York Times and at CNET have highlighted the growing concern that Google holds significant power and influence over Firefox's development. In an interview published today, Mozilla's technology strategist Mike Shaver did his best to proclaim Mozilla's independence. Yes, Google pays Mozilla $56 million per year, Google is the default search engine, and supplier of many of the browser's features (anti-phishing, anti-malware, incorrect URL resolution). Shaver insists that in spite of these ties, Mozilla still calls the shots over Firefox's development."

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  1. Why doesn't Firefox delete cookies by default? by rpp3po · · Score: 0, Troll

    Try this: Click "Tools" -> "Clear private data..." => Now notice that every removal option is checked but two: "Saved Passwords" and "Cookies".

    With all this intimate data which can be collected by tracing cookies sent to your browser, why in the hell doesn't a browser default to delete cookies if you tell it to "clear PRIVATE data"??? Well, maybe because Mozilla's top sponsor is intensively relying on cookies?

    I think this says all about who is" calling the shots" at Mozilla. It's cleary NOT the end user's interests.