Mozilla and Google Sign New Agreement For Default Search
An anonymous reader writes "It appears Google will not cut their default search arrangement with Mozilla. From the official blog post: 'We're pleased to announce that we have negotiated a significant and mutually beneficial revenue agreement with Google. This new agreement extends our long term search relationship with Google for at least three additional years.'"
As a non-profit organization, don't these things eventually have to show up in Mozilla's annual filings? Or are they somehow aggregated together in an opaque way by the subsidiary relationship of the Mozilla Foundation vs. the Mozilla Corporation?
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While Firefox's marketshare has been suffering slightly, I can't imagine that the per-seat value of being the default search engine has changed particularly, and FF is probably the competitor from which Google gains the most: FF reliably agrees with them on most major issues, has no significant strength to threaten Google's actually profitable ventures, and no(well, almost no, you could build FF-only XUL webapps; but nobody does) competing application environment.
Microsoft has a browser, a search engine, win32, and silverlight, so they aren't exactly somebody that Google wants gaining ground, Apple has impressive control of certain high margin markets, and an iron grip on their mobile devices. Firefox has a browser. Unless Google has some aesthetic reason to crush anything it can, and risk the wrath of the antitrust guys, Firefox's existence is somewhere between 'harmless' and 'downright convenient'.
I thought this would be Google's chance to kill Firefox. Not many other search providers for Mozilla to run to. Microsoft can attempt to tie IE and Bing together and Google can tie Chrome and Google search. Firefox is left out in the cold to whither and die like Netscape. Probably not good for the consumer, but such is the way of things.
I'll explain. FOSS advocates aren't necessarily privacy freaks, though sometimes they are. If they're very privacy aware, almost undoubtedly they hate Google. I know a few people who are very privacy aware (or "privacy freaks" as you put it) - they all hate Google.
I also know a number of people (and myself too) who are big advocates and contributors to open-source yet are not so paranoid about privacy. Their opinions on Google vary from positive to negative. I like some of their stuff - they're great with open-source - however I dislike how much power they're getting.
Also you are free to make duckduckgo your default search on Firefox.
some brain-dead observers who had suggested that Google would ditch this source of money in favor of promoting Chrome, a project which generates no direct revenue at all.
How does Firefox generate revenue for Google but Chrome does not? They both do exactly the same thing -- people go to Google to search, where they are subjected to ads, which is where Google makes 98% of its money. Google has very deep pockets but it still seems strange that they are willing to pay $100 Million a year . . . . for what exactly? People who type a search query into that little Google search box in Firefox because they are too lazy and/or stupid to bookmark google.com?
Or scroogle.org
"Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way." -- Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy
i heard that duckduckgo=bing?? wikipedia does not have a clue. also the results are quite good, which makes the bing hypothesis quite unlikely. if anyone knows anything about this, i'd like to know.
Wealth is the gift that keeps on giving.
The deal says it’s for at least another three years. This duration is too enough for the development of Chrome to functioning like Firefox. I use many Google futures which take great support by Chrome but still use Firefox because few plug-ins.
Yes, DuckDuckGo uses Bing as back-end. Which kind of makes the usual slashdot "bing sucks ass" posts kind of funny, especially when the same people are telling how good DuckDuckGo is :)
People who don't want to waste the time to load google.com. It's a lot faster to have one server round-trip than two, esp. on high-latency (e.g. mobile) networks.
I used to work for Mozilla. One thing I can say with confidence is that Mozilla would not have signed this agreement if it restricted their freedom in such a way that they'd start blocking ad blockers or other plugins. Mozilla is very much focused on user control, and is not going to let a third party restrict what a user can do with their software. Google and Mozilla have definitely not always agreed in the past, and I'm sure Mozilla will continue doing things that it believes are in the end-user's best interest. Keep in mind that Mozilla introduced the Do-Not-Track http header, which which Google (last I knew anyway) still hasn't added to Chrome.
noah
Not just Bing
Yes, DuckDuckGo uses Bing as back-end. Which kind of makes the usual slashdot "bing sucks ass" posts kind of funny,
I tried DuckDuckGo for about a month, but the results sucked ass. Now I know why. :)