Mozilla Debuts Firefox Extension that Recommends Content Based on Your Browsing Activity (venturebeat.com)
Mozilla on Tuesday began testing a Firefox extension that shows you its best guesses for what you want to see on the web. From a report: The Advance web extension is available for anyone from today and can analyze content on current active web pages to recommend related tidbits you may want to "read next" from other websites. It will also surface recommendations based on your recent browsing history in a "for you" section. With the extension installed, you just browse the web as you normally would and the little sidebar will show things that are relevant to what you've been looking at. The extension is powered by Laserlike, a VC-funded, machine learning-powered "interest search engine" that delivers personalized content. As such, Laserlike will receive users' browsing history -- something Mozilla wants people to understand before they install the extension. But the company has also built in some tools to boost control and data transparency.
And please be **specific**....
>Laserlike, a VC-funded, machine learning-powered "interest search engine" that delivers personalized content.
Yeah. Sounds as legit as the ASK Toolbar.
How to turn it off?
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
What I choose to view. I don't need some lousy piece of software trying to guess what I want to view next or might be interested in, especially when someone else will use that information for their benefit. Hey, Mozilla, take your stinking software off me, you damn dirty programmers!
We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
The best thing about this extension is that you do not have to install it.