@phoneboy No doubt that has to be the case, which is why this makes sense now and smart by Mozilla's part to have that breakup clause.
@matigo Yep, since OxygenOS it's a fork and it's also not in the security levels of other forks like LineageOS among others. They have been also caught collecting personally identifiable analytics information just a month ago but eventually rolled back [androidpolice.com]
Yep, not good at all.
With Firefox's default search engine back to Google, I find last year's piece very relevant. [recode.net]
Basically, Verizon (the eventual new Yahoo owners) has to pay Mozilla $375 million annually through 2019 due to the breakup clause due to Mozilla backing away because it's not satisfied with Verizon and I can't blame them. Firefox 57, which launched today, They changed their default to Google again which it all makes sense now.
@matigo For me, it's mostly a huge blow for open and privacy most importantly. We all know that Windows 10 is a data and privacy invading hog and is a huge step back really.
Projects are about complete by this week so could be a very boring short week which is good.
The Munich government will switch from Linux to Windows 10 by 2020. [techrepublic.com]
Very discouraging news.
@kdfrawg It's likely because of the well publicized stock constraints on the X which will carry over to 2018. They should have waited a extra year at least.
Google is removing apps with Accessibility Services from it's Play Store unless it benefits people with disabilities [xda-developers.com]
Google with a grim message to developers.