Mozilla execs want change to ballot screen proposal


Recommended Posts

There's a small difference between Microsoft and Adobe. Microsoft makes the OS and bundles/(connects?) everything with it.

Do you also object to Notepad, Paint, Calculator, Wordpad, Windows Explorer, WMP, Media Center, Defragment tool etc. bundled with Windows?

Do you also object to Notepad, Paint, Calculator, Wordpad, Windows Explorer, WMP, Media Center, Defragment tool etc. bundled with Windows?

Obviously. There should be a way to replace/choose those at the time of install and also have those choices presented to the user in a package manager.

DrCheese - Apple are 100% abusing their monopoly by only supplying Macs with OSX, despite the fact that Macs can run Windows and Linux by itself, and they refuse to outsource production and sale of Macs to other companies. They also abuse their monopoly on the iPhone by only allowing Safari on there.

I don't think you understand what a monopoly is and how it works.

In economics, a monopoly (from Greek monos / μονος alone or single + polein / πωλειν, to sell) exists when a specific individual or an enterprise has sufficient control over a particular product or service to determine significantly the terms on which other individuals shall have access to it.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monopoly

Yes, Apple comes with only OS X but since it has only 8-9% of the marketshare, it is not considered a monopoly. Same for the iPhone. Windows is considered a monopoly since they have 88% of the marketshare.

To say that Apple has a monopoly on their computers with OS X is like saying that Dell has a monopoly on their computers since they use mostly Windows. It is not a legal definition.

I just want to know why no ones bitching about OSX/Safari or itunes/iPod yet.

I notice that Microsoft is still handing out the same old talking points, despite all of them having been debunked a million times by now. You should get back to Redmond and tell them to update their propaganda talking points already.

Um, Microsoft made Windows and added the capability to browse the Internet with it. I still don't see whats wrong here?

What's wrong is that they broke the law.

Now if Microsoft forced Apple to include IE with OS X then I could see issues with it. Its hypocrisy that Mozilla doesn't ask the same of Apple, who also have their own branded browser, Safari.

The SAME talking point AGAIN? Seriously, Microsoft REALLY needs to update its talking points. Apple is NOT an OS monopoly FFS.

What's wrong is that they broke the law.

That may well be the law but it's a dumb law, in my opinion. Every other modern OS includes it's own browser. Microsoft should be allowed to as well.

They could still include the ballot box and list alternative choices for anyone who wanted to use them.

So based on your idea's because Microsoft has been successful in the past we need to force them to change there business so that others which already have a decent market share can catch up?

No. It's because Microsoft broke the law. They gained dominance by breaking the law. Like an athlete taking drugs to increse his performance. Do you really think he would be allowed to keep his medal if he was busted? I can hear your whines right now:

"Oh, please don't punish the poor athlete. All he did was take illegal drugs to increase his performance. You are just jealous of his success!"

I am never using Firefox again, I'm uninstalling it right now.

Guess you'll have to uninstall Windows too. And stop using Google for search, Gmail, etc.

Oops! :D

Are you just trying to troll, or what?

Are you just trolling in the Opera thread? You know, takes one to know one? :D

That may well be the law but it's a dumb law, in my opinion.

Which law, specifically? What does this law say? What's dumb about it?

Every other modern OS includes it's own browser. Microsoft should be allowed to as well.

Yeah, so? Did anyone say that Microsoft had to remove IE from Windows? I mean, did you actually read the article before commenting??

even so, they could just issue a mandatory patch via Windows Update that patches in this behaviour into the OS if the final decision takes place after Windows 7's general availability date.

Uhhhh NO.?

As is Windows 7 can not be sold in the EU. No way no how.

This issue is so old, it is like beating the dead horse once again.

I don't see why Microsoft should have to include any browser in their software.. and why stop at browsers? why not include a bunch of bloatware while we are at it. It should come with AIM, Yahoo Messenger, WLM, ICQ and more messenger clients, so you spend the first hour or so uninstalling this crap.

Funny you should mention that, i don't think Microsoft Security Essentials will be well received. If i were a MacAfee, Norton, AVG, ESET, Comodo i'd be the first to pose a plaint if they are going to bundle that.

I would love for you to point out in the Opera thread where I have been trolling....

For example, making groundless assertions:

"Yeah, but Microsoft aren't pushing any sort of Anti-trust complaint about Google's search engine."

And not bothering to even apologize after being corrected:

"Actually, Microsoft has filed antitrust complaints against Google, e.g. when Google bought DoubleClick. But I guess "whining" is fine as long as it's Microsoft doing the "whining", eh? The double standards of some people are amazing..."

Then there's this. And straw men.

Since when does Windows Update or Office heavily rely on IE? Also, if the user makes a conscious decision to choose something else other then IE, does it really matter if it's on the user's HDD? He probably won't use it anyway. If the user uses Firefox, or Opera, and then says "No, thanks, I don't like this" and then switches back to IE - it means you've ****ed up, not MS.

He said "tied", not "heavily rely on". And he was talking about Office, the WU bit was about MS being able to force IE as default browser again whenever it was updated (either itself or through an update to any other program tied to it).

Are you just trolling in the Opera thread? You know, takes one to know one? :D

Good, so you're both trolling. Shut the hell up already.

On the Windows Update front, Anderson countered with an idea of Mozilla's own. "The proposal should be modified to expressly state that Microsoft cannot use Windows Update to trigger any 'Make IE the default' consideration unless the user launched IE intentionally and not just as a requirement of another process," he said, fearing that Microsoft would unfairly leverage the update service.

Anderson also questioned the download link part of the proposed ballot screen. Saying that a link was "insufficient," and citing Mozilla data that claims only about 55% of its users who click a download link actually complete the installation process, he said the link should trigger both a download of the alternate browser and its installation. He also called on the commission to make Microsoft add a launch of the browser maker's instruction page to the process.

I'm okay with this I suppose. While I disagree with ballot idea in general, if they had to make one, they might as well make one function properly. Pull the install file from the browser's site, and then proceed to install. Makes things a bit easier. Also, not being prompted about "default browser" by a window that wasn't launched by the user, sounds nice at least in terms of annoyances.

While some are fully against the ballot box altogether, please put your anger aside as it seems Microsoft will probably be creating one anyway. At least here, we have some good suggestions for the inevitable, as opposed to bitching about the IE logo.

On the preemptive, let me just clarify that this has nothing to do with "double standards". As a user, and a tech even, if Microsoft were to create a ballot box, these changes suggested by Mozilla would simplify the Windows install experience even further. The idea that was tossed around, supposedly by Opera, about software in general updating through Windows Updater just sounded ludicrous. I can't even comprehend that being anywhat of a "good idea".

Edited by dead.cell
Yeah, except OSX/Safari has never really gone above 10% market share so you can't argue that they are a monopoly and abusing their position.

But it is a monopoly if I can only get my hardware, O/S from the same place. Isnt monopoly mean that. Additionally for those who said you can now use any player with iTunes, have you tried. Try to use anything (not just a Zune) and see how it works really.

I'm okay with this I suppose. While I disagree with ballot idea in general, if they had to make one, they might as well make one function properly. Pull the install file from the browser's site, and then proceed to install. Makes things a bit easier. Also, not being prompted about "default browser" by a window that wasn't launched by the user, sounds nice at least in terms of annoyances.

From all solutions possible i guess the ballot screen is the best compromise between MS right to design their OS as they want, and still complying to the legislation.

I can't really imagine another way to comply, without going to extremes.

EU finds MS bundles IE and stifles competition.

a) get rid of a browser altogether. Not user friendly and very likely to backfire on MS.

b) a preinstallation window, where you can choose either to install IE or nothing. Not much better. No average Joe is going to say no and be without browser.

c) supply all market browsers installation packages. Unfair to MS

d) ballot box. No excessive extra design, installation gets plucked from the browsers own servers. Everyone has a fair chance to get installed by preference. Market forces will then decide which browsers survive.

Can't see how anyone could be against that?

I am never using Firefox again, I'm uninstalling it right now.

Agreed. Google Chrome you are not complete yet, but here I come....

This is seriously STUPID.. I NEVER use IE, yet I still find this utter bull****.. Firefox OWNS the market, yet they still complain? Screw that.... Be gone from my pc.

I love the fact that you can be penalized for making a product that is the "majority".

Hey dead.cell are you going to remove the Firefox, Chrome and Safari icons from your "Browsers worth trying." signature too now? :laugh:

I support browsers I like, and that's not the topic of the discussion.

But if you're interested in my likes and dislikes, feel free to PM me. I'll hook you up with my cell number too, and we can make a date. :wub:

Obviously. There should be a way to replace/choose those at the time of install and also have those choices presented to the user in a package manager.

So where does it stop? The command prompt? The HAL? or the NT kernel? If someone doesn't want to use these things that come "bundled" with Windows - they might as well not use Windows?

If I start getting ballots for every single thing in Windows, I will go crazy! Launch calculator - oh you must choose between these and these. Launch WinExplorer - please choose.

That is just stupid.

lol, well, nice; here's my point of view on the "include the browsers on installdisk not just a download link".

browsers are outdated due to exploits the day after a new version is released (ok, overdoing it a bit). It would even be better if

no browser would be included, just download links, and you had to even download IE. maybe then people would have

updated versions of browsers on their computers. And after that; SILENT updates trough MS update (in vista/7) for all browsers.

I know, I know, silent updates are the devil :devil:, but i believe that people would be satisfied with knowing that their browser is

secure for all their online browsing needs.

I really cannot believe that their still at this topic. just really shut up.

For example, making groundless assertions:

"Yeah, but Microsoft aren't pushing any sort of Anti-trust complaint about Google's search engine."

How is that trolling?

And not bothering to even apologize after being corrected:

"Actually, Microsoft has filed antitrust complaints against Google, e.g. when Google bought DoubleClick. But I guess "whining" is fine as long as it's Microsoft doing the "whining", eh? The double standards of some people are amazing..."

Well, actually you didn't correct me, as Microsoft have not lodged any antitrust case against Google's Search business, as is what I had originally stated. Also, thats not trolling either.

Then there's this.

That I'll give you, but it was inresponse to another troll.

And straw men.

...Fail much?

@Antaris

Don't mind him. He is just some internet guy fighting for Opera as proven/shown in the other thread. Paid Opera shill or not, just ignore.

That would be if Mac was the only brand of personal computers available.

Windows is not the only general purpose OS available.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • UniGetUI 2026.2.1 by Razvan Serea UniGetUI is an application whose main goal is to create an intuitive GUI for the most common CLI package managers for Windows 10 and Windows 11, such as Winget, Scoop and Chocolatey. With UniGetUI, you'll be able to download, install, update and uninstall any software that's published on the supported package managers — and so much more. UniGetUI features Install, update and remove software from your system easily at one click: UniGetUI combines the packages from the most used package managers for windows: WinGet, Chocolatey, Scoop, Pip, Npm and .NET Tool. Discover new packages and filter them to easily find the package you want. View detailed metadata about any package before installing it. Get the direct download URL or the name of the publisher, as well as the size of the download. Easily bulk-install, update or uninstall multiple packages at once selecting multiple packages before performing an operation Automatically update packages, or be notified when updates become available. Skip versions or completely ignore updates in a per-package basis. Manage your available updates at the touch of a button from the Widgets pane or from Dev Home pane with UniGetUI Widgets. The system tray icon will also show the available updates and installed package, to efficiently update a program or remove a package from your system. Easily customize how and where packages are installed. Select different installation options and switches for each package. Install an older version or force to install a 32bit architecture. [But don't worry, those options will be saved for future updates for this package] Share packages with your friends to show them off that program you found. Here is an example: Hey @friend, Check out this program! Export custom lists of packages to then import them to another machine and install those packages with previously-specified, custom installation parameters. Setting up machines or configuring a specific software setup has never been easier. Backup your packages to a local file to easily recover your setup in a matter of seconds when migrating to a new machine Devolutions UniGetUI 2026.2.1 changelog: This release brings several quality-of-life improvements, new troubleshooting features, privacy enhancements, and a collection of fixes and stability improvements across UniGetUI. New Features Added an operation counter to provide better visibility into ongoing package operations. Added a setting to automatically redact usernames from exported logs, making it easier to share diagnostic information while protecting personal data. UniGetUI now opens the release notes page after updating by default, helping users discover new features, improvements, and fixes. This behavior can be disabled from Settings. Expanded diagnostics and troubleshooting capabilities to simplify issue reporting and support. Improvements Improved update reliability and handling of update-related edge cases. Enhanced installer behavior when updating running UniGetUI instances. Improved package manager integrations and package metadata processing. Refined various user interface elements for a more consistent experience. Updated package screenshots, icons, and bundled resources. Improved logging and error reporting throughout the application. Bug Fixes Fixed multiple issues affecting application updates and self-update workflows. Resolved several package installation and upgrade edge cases. Fixed UI inconsistencies and unexpected behaviors across different pages. Improved handling of package manager responses and failure scenarios. Addressed issues affecting package discovery and metadata retrieval. Fixed a number of stability issues reported by the community. Performance & Stability Improved overall application stability during package operations. Reduced the likelihood of update interruptions and inconsistent update states. Various reliability and performance optimizations across the codebase. Download: UniGetUI 64-bit | Portable | ~200.0 MB (Open Source) Download: UniGetUI ARM64 | Portable Links: UniGetUI Home Page | GitHub | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • PDF4QT 1.6.0.0 by Razvan Serea PDF4QT is a free and open-source application created to provide a complete solution for working with PDF documents in a simple, flexible, and effective way. It offers all the essential tools you need to handle your files: you can view PDFs with smooth navigation, edit content, annotate pages, and highlight key sections for better collaboration. It also allows you to compare two versions of a document, making it easy to spot changes. Built-in security features give you control over protecting sensitive information and managing access. Applications PDF4QT Viewer Profi: Advanced PDF browsing with encryption, digital signature verification, annotation editing, regex text search, page-to-image conversion, and plugin support. PDF4QT Viewer Lite: Lightweight viewer with essential, user-friendly PDF viewing functions. PDF4QT DocPage Organizer: Merge, split, move, clone, or add pages easily with an intuitive interface. PDF4QT DocDiff: Compare two PDFs, highlight differences page-to-page, and export results to XML. Key Features Multithreading Support for faster PDF processing Hardware Accelerated Rendering for smooth, high-quality display Encryption to secure documents Color Management to preserve accurate color profiles Optional Content Handling to control visibility of content Text Layout Analysis for better text extraction and editing Signature Validation for verifying digital signatures Annotations and Form Filling for interactivity Text-to-Speech Conversion to listen to PDFs Advanced Annotation Tools (images, text, etc.) File Attachments Management to view and save attachments Optimization to reduce file size without losing quality Command Line Tool for automation Audio Book Conversion from PDFs Internal Structure Inspector to explore PDF structure Compare Documents to detect differences Redaction to remove sensitive information Document Signing for digital authentication PDF4QT 1.6.0.0 release notes: PDF4QT 1.6.0.0 brings a major image compression and optimization update, especially for PageMaster and assembled output documents. Image compression is now integrated into the assembly/export workflow, backed by new optimizer infrastructure, UI controls, feedback fixes, and tests. This should make PageMaster much more useful for producing smaller output PDFs directly from assembled or reorganized documents. The release also contains a large PageMaster refresh with improved drag and drop, recent files, crop pages, save/restore functionality, rotation and size indicators, a reworked icon set, and faster output preview rendering. Viewer and Editor workflows were improved with wildcard Advanced Find, Enter-to-search behavior, better outline keyboard selection, startup settings, fullscreen support, side-to-side scrolling, smoother scrolling, text selection, snapping, and expanded annotation controls. Compatibility and platform behavior were improved as well, including fixes for embedded files, fonts, checkboxes, invisible text, menu colors, highlights, XMP metadata, Windows color management, AppImage packaging, MSIX generation, installer behavior, translations, and newer compiler/Qt warnings. The commit history also includes a new scan-and-edit plugin foundation and color management performance work. Changelog: Highlights Image compression for PageMaster / DocPage Organizer and assembled output documents (#92) Major PageMaster UX refresh, including drag and drop, recent files, crop pages, save/restore, icons, and output preview performance (#383, #18) Improved image optimization feedback, including final resolution and DPI updates (#384) Better Viewer and Editor navigation: fullscreen, side-to-side scrolling, smoother scrolling, text selection, snapping, and outline keyboard selection (#242, #368, #136, #321, #250, #373) Advanced Find wildcard mode and Enter-to-search behavior (#379, #378) PDF compatibility fixes for embedded files, fonts, checkboxes, invisible text, form content suppression, and Windows color management (#225, #356, #256, #230, #326, #224, #385, #388) Startup settings, custom settings directory support, Linux double-click viewer separation, and packaging/build fixes (#382, #380, #381) Scan-and-edit plugin foundation and broader translation updates from the 1.6.0.0 development cycle Resolved Issues Issue #389: Adding hyperlink to internal object in PDF Issue #388: Update Windows color management system Issue #385: PDFTextLayoutGenerator::isContentKindSuppressed(ContentKind kind) is missing ContentKind::Form Issue #384: In the "Optimize Images" dialog, the info on the final image resolution and final DPI does not update Issue #383: UX improvements for PDF4QT PageMaster tool (v1.5.3.1) (ex. DocPage Organizer) Issue #382: Startup Settings Issue #381: Separated apps for double-click viewer in Linux Issue #380: Ability to run app with custom settings directory - executable parameter with path Issue #379: Advanced Find - Wildcard Mode Issue #378: Advanced Find - Should start searching if Enter key is pressed Issue #376: Deleting a note jumps to Outline Issue #375: Not enough maximum compiled page cache Issue #373: Ctrl/Shift keyboard selection for Outline Issue #372: Option to not color images Issue #370: Extracting pages within a range Issue #369: Keeping redact box on Issue #368: Side-to-side scrolling Issue #357: Bulk delete/add/edit of page labels Issue #356: Compatibility issues - font problems Issue #354: Color blend mode for highlights Issue #352: Icon size of the sidebar Issue #349: Add inherit zoom to bookmark zoom options Issue #338: Editor toolbox higher than editor window Issue #334: Impossible to set French language Issue #326: Checkboxes don't render in PDF4QT Issue #324: Menu text not rendered with correct color Issue #321: Select text in Viewer Issue #291: Support for editing XMP metadata or exporting to PDF/UA format Issue #282: Editor outline view: always zooms to around 50% Issue #256: PDF4QT cannot show some specific fonts correctly Issue #253: Undo/redo doesn't work in "edit page content" mode Issue #250: Snapping Issue #242: Full screen Issue #234: Setting font, font size and area of text annotations Issue #230: Garbled characters when opening PDF files with PDF4QT Issue #225: PDF4QT cannot open PDF files with embedded files Issue #224: Option to remove invisible text Issue #194: Change page size Issue #160: Color | Custom (green/black) does not work Issue #136: Smooth scrolling of document with mouse middle wheel - flywheel Issue #92: Add image compression to PDF DocPage Organizer Issue #18: Performance optimization - OutputPreview Renderer Download: PDF4QT 1.6.0.0 | Portable | ~30.0 MB (Open Source) Download: PDF4QT MSIX | 29.4 MB Links: PDF4QT Home Page | PDF4QT @GitHub | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Same here or that Opera Max was not a thing anymore. Nothing lost... Who the hell would be considering Opera or Samsung when needing a VPN? LOL
    • If you go to the game developer website you can see that indeed Cyril Paciullo is the game director and developer https://www.pluralys.ca/about-us/ and when clicking on his name it lists Messenger Plus! as part of his CV. In case you wondered what happened to Patchou
    • A difficult position to be in. Either they cater to us users or they cater to news curators to potentially increase traffic. Personally, I wasn't being sarcastic. Hosting a website isn't free, so without traffic this site stops existing, and if you want traffic you have to play the game. I legitimately thought the title was good. Not because I like it, but because it's the kind of title people will click on. This site needs that.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Veteran
      branfont went up a rank
      Veteran
    • Reacting Well
      Almohandis earned a badge
      Reacting Well
    • First Post
      Cosminus earned a badge
      First Post
    • One Year In
      ThatGuyOnline earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Week One Done
      Jeroen Wilms earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      472
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      181
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      120
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      85
    5. 5
      neufuse
      73
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!