13 comments

  • red_admiral4 hours ago
    &gt; <i>Mozilla</i>: Break free from big tech - our products put you in control of a safer, more private internet experience.<p>(Adds AI that needs 7 about:config entries to disable, until users roast it enough that they add an off switch.)<p>&gt; <i>Waterfox</i>: And we still don’t have AI in the browser. That hasn’t changed. The browser’s job is to load web pages, keep your data private, and get out of the way. It seems other browsers have forgotten that.<p>At some point I think we should just redirect the Firefox funding to Waterfox.
    • darkwater2 hours ago
      From TFA:<p>&gt; The original text implied Brave special cases ads on their search partner’s page - they don’t. Brave blocks third party ads on all websites by default, regardless of any partnership, and offers an additional aggressive mode that blocks first party ads as well. Waterfox’s approach of allowing text ads on the default search partner page is our own decision for sustainability,<p>I would like to stress on the last sentence:<p><pre><code> Waterfox’s approach of allowing text ads on the default search partner page is our own decision for sustainability </code></pre> So basically they are permitting ads from their paying partners.
      • red_admiral24 minutes ago
        Which is still miles above Firefox (Win11&#x2F;x64, 149.0, EU), where you have to untick everying from &quot;Suggestions from Firefox&quot; to &quot;Trending search suggestions&quot; to &quot;allow personalised extension recommendations&quot; to &quot;Recommended stories&quot; and &quot;sponsored shortcuts&quot; on the home screen, because [1]<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;support.mozilla.org&#x2F;en-US&#x2F;kb&#x2F;firefox-suggest?as=u&amp;utm_source=inproduct" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;support.mozilla.org&#x2F;en-US&#x2F;kb&#x2F;firefox-suggest?as=u&amp;ut...</a><p>&gt; We partner with adMarketplace, Yelp and AccuWeather to provide sponsored suggestions that enhance your browsing experience with helpful, context-based information.<p>And if you leave Firefox for a while you get the &quot;welcome back&quot; bar that lets you ... uninstall ublock with one click before you&#x27;ve realised it.<p>Waterfox has text ads on the default search page based on your search query, not based on tracking you [2]. And it&#x27;s really easy to turn off.<p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;support.mozilla.org&#x2F;en-US&#x2F;kb&#x2F;firefox-suggest?as=u&amp;utm_source=inproduct" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;support.mozilla.org&#x2F;en-US&#x2F;kb&#x2F;firefox-suggest?as=u&amp;ut...</a> and <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;support.mozilla.org&#x2F;en-US&#x2F;kb&#x2F;sponsor-privacy?as=u&amp;utm_source=inproduct" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;support.mozilla.org&#x2F;en-US&#x2F;kb&#x2F;sponsor-privacy?as=u&amp;ut...</a><p>[2] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.startpage.com&#x2F;privacy-please&#x2F;startpage-articles&#x2F;whats-startpages-revenue-model" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.startpage.com&#x2F;privacy-please&#x2F;startpage-articles&#x2F;...</a>
      • MrAlex942 hours ago
        I think that&#x27;s an unfair framing. No one is paying Waterfox to allow ads - it&#x27;s a revenue share from the default search engine (which I&#x27;ve always been transparent about)[1], same as every other independent browser that has a search partner. It&#x27;s not an &quot;acceptable ads&quot; programme where advertisers pay to be whitelisted.<p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.waterfox.com&#x2F;docs&#x2F;policies&#x2F;revenue-model&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.waterfox.com&#x2F;docs&#x2F;policies&#x2F;revenue-model&#x2F;</a>
        • darkwater56 minutes ago
          Well, the default search engine is definitely your business partner, no? So they are getting a different tratment: default search engine (like in most other browsers, nothing fancy here) and their ads in their SERP are not blocked - at least by default - by the embedded ad-blocking engine of WaterFox. Isn&#x27;t that correct? Happy to stand corrected, if it&#x27;s the case.
          • MrAlex9414 minutes ago
            Yes, that&#x27;s correct. Startpage is the default search partner, and their search ads aren&#x27;t blocked by default. Users can enable blocking on that page too with a single toggle in settings. That&#x27;s why I laid it all out in this post, to let users know - it&#x27;s about keeping Waterfox sustainable (paying bills, putting food on the table) as it&#x27;s my only source of income currently.<p>I&#x27;ve mentioned in another comment, that I&#x27;ve tried other ways such as with subscription paid services, but unfortunately there&#x27;s nowhere near enough traction for it to be sustainable.<p>Also bare in mind Waterfox currently comes with nothing, so this is just an extra layer of protection.
  • zettabomb5 hours ago
    I remember using Waterfox when it was new. I moved away from it when Firefox started pushing 64 bit builds natively, and I&#x27;ve stuck with it since then. Recently though it does seem as if they might be going down a dark path, so perhaps I&#x27;ll consider switching again. I remember Waterfox was hard forked after Quantum became a thing, in order to keep support with XPI - is that still the case?
    • MrAlex944 hours ago
      The hard fork was &quot;Waterfox Classic&quot;, which just became unsustainable to maintain.<p>Rather than support for XPI (which is just the packaging for Firefox webextensions), the current version of Waterfox does still support bootstrapped extensions - in theory anyone can still write one, with access to all the privileged JavaScript APIs typically not accessible to MV2&#x2F;MV3 webextensions.<p>It&#x27;s not widely used though, there are two repos I&#x27;m aware of that take advantage of this:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;xiaoxiaoflood&#x2F;firefox-scripts&#x2F;tree&#x2F;master&#x2F;extensions" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;xiaoxiaoflood&#x2F;firefox-scripts&#x2F;tree&#x2F;master...</a><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;onemen&#x2F;TabMixPlus&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;onemen&#x2F;TabMixPlus&#x2F;</a>
  • tommica6 hours ago
    The ads on default search partner is a fine compromise - reality is that projects need money, and if this helps them (and makes it less dependant on donations) then great! As long as the ad blocking happens elsewhere, it is fine.<p>I need to move back to waterfox again...
    • Vinnl4 hours ago
      Reminds me of Netscape Navigator adding a popup blocker, but also adding the ability to allowlist sites - so that it could have the Netscape website allowlisted by default.
    • MrAlex944 hours ago
      Yes, enabled everywhere - and it will just be a simple toggle to also enable it on the search partner page, no hoops to jump through.
  • kajika915 hours ago
    I am surprise there is no mention of Librewolf here. The differences of Librewolf and Waterfox is pretty hard to grasp, I am digging a little bit but so far I guess I would say using any of them is still way better than the main alternatives.<p>Librewolf is, to me, the way better alternative as this is really in the FOSS mindset : a tool for everyone to use and by anyone to contribute. Seeing their plateform alone (Lemmy&#x2F;Matrix&#x2F;Codeberg, they also have a reddit community it seems) you can already see this is an other world than Waterwolf&#x27;s bluesky&#x2F;reddit&#x2F;github. To be fair I can understand the SNS part but the github is a big redflag to me.<p>As usual I can see people that are very probably sincere in their goals not realizing the way they are going will lead to the usual enshitification: company focus, brave dependency, etc.<p>I note that Waterfox seems to legally originate from UK and it is refreshing to have an ecosystem that is not centralized in 1 country : for the sake of everyone it is better not to rely to much on 1 legislator (see age verification for instance).
    • lproven10 minutes ago
      &gt; The differences of Librewolf and Waterfox is pretty hard to grasp<p>I use Waterfox on Linux and one of the things I like the most is that it works with the global menu bar in Unity, Xfce and so on. LibreWolf, in my testing, does not. My experiment with it ended there, TBH. (Neither did Floorp.)<p>Hopping between Waterfox and Firefox is easy because Waterfox works with Mozilla Sync. I think LibreWolf might not, and I have read somewhere that it disables the Mozilla password manager.<p>I find Waterfox UI and interop better, so I use it.<p>Librewolf may be even more private, but the poor UI was a deal-breaker for me. YMMV.
    • MrAlex944 hours ago
      Librewolf and Waterfox have always had different goals. Waterfox has always had a more opinionated take on defaults and privacy. Essentially the goal has been keep the web as private as possible without breaking it (I know Librewolf is more aggressive there and that sometimes leads to website breakages) and I think I&#x27;ve managed that well, especially with the implementation of Oblivious DNS by default.<p>The upside of Librewolf being a community project is also IMO its downside - there isn&#x27;t any accountability and with the current climate around the world becoming more hostile to online services, I think governance is hugely important, which is why I&#x27;ve tried to collate everything as much as I can: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.waterfox.com&#x2F;docs&#x2F;policies&#x2F;company-information&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.waterfox.com&#x2F;docs&#x2F;policies&#x2F;company-information&#x2F;</a><p>At the end of the day, if something goes wrong, at least with Waterfox I can be held accountable.
      • adrianwaj3 hours ago
        There was a recent comment: &quot;if you don&#x27;t know: any browser extension can read input&#x2F;password fields across all site(s) you gave it access to (yeah, it&#x27;s crazy but unfortunately true).&quot;<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=47553048">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=47553048</a><p>Would either WF or LW fix that? Is it true?
        • MrAlex942 hours ago
          Nothing to &quot;fix&quot; per se - webextensions need to interact with website data, otherwise they wouldn&#x27;t be much use. Any extension with content script access can read page content including form fields.<p>The only real mitigation is being selective about which extensions you install and what permissions you grant them (even then, ownership of extensions change hands, updates can change what they do... it&#x27;s a never ending battle really).
  • jameshush8 hours ago
    Had the pleasure of working with Alex while at System1. Great guy. If I remember correctly I got one tiny change merged into Waterfox that&#x27;s probably since been undone in the years since :-).
  • keyle12 hours ago
    Interesting I&#x27;ve never heard of waterfox before. Looks interesting!
    • lproven6 minutes ago
      I&#x27;ve covered it a few times on the Register. :-)<p>5Y ago:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.theregister.com&#x2F;2021&#x2F;11&#x2F;04&#x2F;waterfox_firefox_fork&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.theregister.com&#x2F;2021&#x2F;11&#x2F;04&#x2F;waterfox_firefox_fork...</a><p>Last year:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.theregister.com&#x2F;2025&#x2F;12&#x2F;18&#x2F;firefox_no_ai_alternative_waterfox&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.theregister.com&#x2F;2025&#x2F;12&#x2F;18&#x2F;firefox_no_ai_alterna...</a><p>This year:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.theregister.com&#x2F;2026&#x2F;01&#x2F;19&#x2F;just_the_browser&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.theregister.com&#x2F;2026&#x2F;01&#x2F;19&#x2F;just_the_browser&#x2F;</a>
  • kevinbaiv6 hours ago
    Feels like the real problem isn’t ads, it’s that there’s no widely accepted funding model for open source.
    • MrAlex942 hours ago
      I&#x27;ve tried a few ways - people are generous with donations, but you can&#x27;t really live off of it and I have a subscription based search service, but people just aren&#x27;t willing to pay.<p>This is basically the only potential way I can keep this going, even then there may not be much uptake, but it&#x27;s a hail Mary.
      • lowdude1 hour ago
        I came across Waterfox a number of times over the years, but I think it will be difficult to get a similar amount of reach for your search engine. In particular, on the home page of Waterfox, there is nothing even hinting at the existence of the search service. Maybe this is intentional, as it is in public beta for now, but I think it would help to at least note its existence there, or near the `donate` section (as a means of support, rather than direct donation). Also make sure that this directly exists as one of the search engine options for Waterfox, if it isn&#x27;t already, every click involved in the setup will make it easier for people to try out.<p>But charging $5 &#x2F; $10 for basically what StartPage does (to the best of my understanding) is going to be a tough pitch either way. Out of interest, what would the pricing for the Google API look like, if you had no other costs involved?
  • xacky3 hours ago
    There is no pure browser anymore. The little red hen of Google funds everything, and forks like Waterfox just change a few parts of the UI but still rely on the upstream for all actual browser code. Even Mozilla was bootstrapped by AOL-Time Warner Back in the day. If you look at Ladybird they already have lots of ad companies funding it as well and will demand its enshittification if it gets popular.
    • pgwalsh1 hour ago
      Have you checked out Ladybird, it&#x27;s independent.
  • BoredPositron5 hours ago
    Sorry, I still can&#x27;t get over the system1 shit in 2020.
    • MrAlex944 hours ago
      I get the scepticism but IMO the reaction at the time was rough and I partially get why.<p>System1 is a search syndication company. Their business is contextual ads on search results - no PII, no tracking profiles, no behavioural targeting. It&#x27;s functionally the same model as DuckDuckGo. If I&#x27;d sold to DDG, I don&#x27;t think anyone would&#x27;ve batted an eyelid.<p>I get it, the timing (privacy browser sold to company with &quot;ad&quot; in its description) looked terrible in a headline and I take responsibility for not communicating it better at the time, which I feel like wouldn&#x27;t have led to such a massive furor.
  • mrbluecoat12 hours ago
    I love how &quot;15 Years of Forking&quot; is right next to &quot;There is no Spoon&quot; on the HN homepage right now :D
  • kaluga5 hours ago
    whether you use waterfox or librewolf, having anything outside of Blink is the only thing keeping the open web breathing.
  • renewiltord10 hours ago
    Everyone starts out pure but then the lucre calls.<p>&gt; <i>Waterfox’s approach of allowing text ads on the default search partner page is our own decision for sustainability</i><p>&quot;Sustainability&quot; indeed.
    • chii9 hours ago
      You either die an open source project, or live long enough to see yourself become ad-driven in the name of sustainability.<p>Firefox has already done so to google, and when a fork is big enough, they certainly will hear the siren&#x27;s call.
      • renewiltord7 hours ago
        You’re right 100% The guy literally sold his browser to an online advertising company and then bought it back. Why do you think startpage is the default? Look up the online advertising company that owns it and then look up who he sold the browser to before taking it back.
    • kev00910 hours ago
      Did you read the same article as me? The word is singularly used in the context of how do you earn money as a project, i.e. sustain the effort. It&#x27;s a bit of a leap to imply this is impure unless they made some contract stating the opposite or are doing something dark.
      • renewiltord7 hours ago
        Oh yeah, the part where he sold the browser to an online advertising company that just happens to run startpage is purity huh? Damn, Google and Chrome must be saints<p>You must be one of those guys who reads Philip Morris “articles” on the benefits of smoking and concludes there’s no evidence for harm.
    • sersi7 hours ago
      I mean first thing I do in any browser is change the search engine so it&#x27;s not like it affects me in any way. I don&#x27;t expect opensource projects to never make deals that give them some money, I just want them to be fully transparent when they do. Waterfox is transparent and clearly states who and how they sell their user data to.
    • HDBaseT10 hours ago
      You can however of course swap out the default Search Engine with Google or whatever privacy focused replacement (e.g. DuckDuckGo, Kagi, etc).
    • ThrowawayTestr8 hours ago
      Have you ever sent a donation to Alex?
      • renewiltord8 hours ago
        Why would I donate to someone who is willing to sell my attention?
        • pedrogpimenta7 hours ago
          Did you do it before they did so?
          • renewiltord7 hours ago
            Looks like I judged them well in not doing so. I would have been such a sucker. After all, donating to corporations is for bootlickers.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.waterfox.com&#x2F;blog&#x2F;waterfox-has-joined-system1&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.waterfox.com&#x2F;blog&#x2F;waterfox-has-joined-system1&#x2F;</a><p>So they’re just shilling their own search product on their own browser. No different from Google and Chrome. Except with some corporate bootlicking from running dog lackeys.<p>He literally sold it to an online advertising company lol.<p>EDIT: haha, the best defence of this guy you guys can muster is &quot;If you don&#x27;t pay me, I&#x27;ll sell your data to online advertising companies&quot; and that this is some kind of good thing.
            • ThrowawayTestr6 hours ago
              Maybe if you donated some money he wouldn&#x27;t have had to.
            • pedrogpimenta4 hours ago
              Right. So you don&#x27;t ever donate to anything, right? Just in case. The future. You know?
              • JoaoCostaIFG2 hours ago
                It&#x27;s somewhat funny that this guy asks for 850$&#x2F;hour for consulting (in his hn profile description), never donates to anything, and writes multiple comments complaining like this.
            • akoboldfrying5 hours ago
              I&#x27;m impressed by how thoroughly you ignored the question of whether your own inaction was partly responsible for the outcome that occurred later, and which you dislike.<p>It has persuaded me that your own inaction was totally unrelated to this outcome.