Although this has been heavily downvoted, the author has a point: what do private, safe AI experiences in a software mean for the common browser user? How does a company that was founded as an ‘alternative’ to a default browser take the same approach? For those that do and will use the tech indiscriminately, what’s next for them?
Just as cookie/site separation became a default setting in FF eventually, or the ability to force a more secure private DNS, what could Mozilla consider to prevent abuse, slop, LLM-syncophantism and deception, undesired data training, tracking, and more?
Although this has been heavily downvoted, the author has a point: what do private, safe AI experiences in a software mean for the common browser user? How does a company that was founded as an ‘alternative’ to a default browser take the same approach? For those that do and will use the tech indiscriminately, what’s next for them?
Just as cookie/site separation became a default setting in FF eventually, or the ability to force a more secure private DNS, what could Mozilla consider to prevent abuse, slop, LLM-syncophantism and deception, undesired data training, tracking, and more?