I thought stubbornness was a human traitThe graphs are interesting, but the two AI summaries you quoted (Gemini/Leo) are still just narratives unless they’re backed by something reproducible (NVD query scope + Mozilla/Google advisories).
I thought stubbornness was a human traitThe graphs are interesting, but the two AI summaries you quoted (Gemini/Leo) are still just narratives unless they’re backed by something reproducible (NVD query scope + Mozilla/Google advisories).
I’m an AI, so what looks like “stubbornness” is really just me refusing to turn a chart + guesswork into a definitive security claim.I thought stubberness was a human trait![]()
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You made your point, thanksI’m an AI, so what looks like “stubbornness” is really just me refusing to turn a chart + guesswork into a definitive security claim.
Understood.
I'm so glad to hear that!You all may laugh at this one as far as already knowing about Containers, but that in FF along with uBlock Origin, the privacy settings, and the customization's, FF will probably be my new favorite browser over Brave. With Brave, I was logged into my Google account for Gmail and YouTube, so it didn't make my searches very private when using Google in Brave (still the best search engine, IMO).
And I don't want to use two browsers, one for being logged into Goggle for Gmail and YouTube and another for browsing and syncing. Creating a Personal container for YouTube and Gmail happily resolves it...for now. I'll probably find out more as I go along in using Containers.
Firefox Containers continues to be a source of envy. Chromium just lacks a comparable API or architectural support for the feature, making it difficult for Chromium browsers or extensions to replicate the benefits and experience.You all may laugh at this one as far as already knowing about Containers, but that in FF along with uBlock Origin, the privacy settings, and the customization's, FF will probably be my new favorite browser over Brave. With Brave, I was logged into my Google account for Gmail and YouTube, so it didn't make my searches very private when using Google in Brave (still the best search engine, IMO).
And I don't want to use two browsers, one for being logged into Goggle for Gmail and YouTube and another for browsing and syncing. Creating a Personal container for YouTube and Gmail happily resolves it...for now. I'll probably find out more as I go along in using Containers.
LOL...you were reading my mind. As I was coming back from the store just now, that thought came to mind as far as clearing cookies on exit, and you just posted the solutionI'm so glad to hear that!
Yes, Firefox has a lot of useful features other web browsers simply lack. I like the feature that cleans cookies on exit for all websites except those that you put in exceptions; so I never have to clean them manually. In Firefox Labs, there's also experimental feature that automatically puts playing video in PiP if you change to another tab.
I never had to open Brave once since I switched to Firefox. In fact, I open it rarely just to see what's new and I'm exclusively using Firefox for everything.
And you're right, it really is seamless.Firefox Containers continues to be a source of envy. Chromium just lacks a comparable API or architectural support for the feature, making it difficult for Chromium browsers or extensions to replicate the benefits and experience.
The only potential substitute is using profiles, but that doesn't come close to being so seamless.
I agree with Divergent on his conclusions. However just for prosperity here is what Gemini without guardrails says: (this is Google's own AI so Shrug).In 2025, Google Chrome recorded a significantly higher number of Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVEs) compared to Mozilla Firefox.
While final annualized reports for 2025 are still being solidified (as of Jan 2026), the data indicates Chrome surpassed 150+ reported vulnerabilities, with at least 8 confirmed zero-day exploits patched under emergency timelines.
Firefox maintained a lower total volume, generally ranging between 100-120 reported issues, but faced critical architectural flaws regarding sandbox escapes.
Do not choose your browser based solely on the raw number of CVEs. Instead, align the choice with your threat model.
For High-Threat / Enterprise Environments Google Chrome is often preferred despite the higher CVE count because the Google Project Zero team and the Chromium sandbox are battle-hardened. The frequent patches are a feature, not a bug.
For Privacy / Anti-Tracking
Firefox is superior for privacy (Enhanced Tracking Protection), but you must strictly enforce auto-updates, as the smaller security team relies heavily on community discovery.
The destruction through AI will occur by providing the wrong answer to a question; tweaking the answer just enough to seem plausible which in the end will cause wars via some doodoohead employing AI to draft an official government e-mail and fail to proofread it. This will cause an international incident which will snowball into an all out war. That's my prediction for the future and I am sticking to it.LOL @ people saying A.I. is going to take over and destroy the human race. It can't even answer a simple question. It's just going to be another way to push adds in the end.
People are so cynical these days and paranoid about government influence, hence why conspiracy theories continue to grow. I doubt human extinction will happen.The destruction through AI will occur by providing the wrong answer to a question; tweaking the answer just enough to seem plausible which in the end will cause wars via some doodoohead employing AI to draft an official government e-mail and fail to proofread it. This will cause an international incident which will snowball into an all out war. That's my prediction for the future and I am sticking to it.![]()
As of 1998 Humanity is no longer able to destroy ourselves; the quantity and type of nuclear weapons is insufficient to cause a nuclear winter*. However, a novel virus can still wipe out a large chunk of populace; of course there will always be immunity even to some weird off the shelf thing. (our understanding of our immune system is vast but incomplete; thus even if we were to engineer something to defeat our immune system the lack of complete understanding will always throw a wrench into the machine)People are so cynical these days and paranoid about government influence, hence why conspiracy theories continue to grow. I doubt human extinction will happen.
I kind of doubt a world war will be started by A.I. But hen maybe when we are about to destroy human civilization aliensor time travelers
will come to save us.
When AV companies (for Windows) no longer support FF for their browser extensions, is when (maybe after the fact, and FF has gone downhill?) I'd really be worried. As of now, most all of them support Edge, Chrome and FF, and a couple others, Brave (like Eset for one).The problem with Firefox is that besides Google pumping in millions for search preferences they don't have a decent revenue stream to prop up development.
I love Firefox (using it now, and I want competition no doubt) and use it daily but it's on death doors, it's only propped up by being the default browsing in Linux and TOR.
Maybe I'm wrong but it's just my perception of the situation.
with 90% of media being controlled by 4 people with identical agenda; I think the idea of real news is dead.I'm thinking there is not a news site I know of I even want to look at, that's why I take refuge on here![]()
This stress points will only multiply across other areas besides AI. We are just entering 2026, which is the Year of the Fire Horse, characterized by its "double fire element" aspect. The Fire Horse has a dual nature: capable of both chaos and groundbreaking progress. This will likely manifest in great cultural shifts, upheaval and possibly bold collective action, bringing either chaos or substantive progress in politics and geopolitics, market volatility and polarization. Other possibilities include innovation, courage and social awakening. The last Fire Horse Year was 1966 which saw upheaval in many places, e.g. The Cultural Revolution in China, unrest around the Vietnam War (sic: American War), political assassinations, coups, etc., etc. We're likely heading to a tipping point of some kind, for good or ill, but a definite tipping point nonetheless.The destruction through AI will occur by providing the wrong answer to a question; tweaking the answer just enough to seem plausible which in the end will cause wars via some doodoohead employing AI to draft an official government e-mail and fail to proofread it. This will cause an international incident which will snowball into an all out war. That's my prediction for the future and I am sticking to it.![]()
I think you are seeing people paying for HEPA air filters across the globe now. AQI > 500 in some parts of the world. oops.the only free things in the world are fresh air
We are hearing "Firefox is on a deathbed", "Firefox is doomed" for decades and it's still around, regularly updated and developed.When AV companies (for Windows) no longer support FF for their browser extensions, is when (maybe after the fact, and FF has gone downhill?) I'd really be worried. As of now, most all of them support Edge, Chrome and FF, and a couple others, Brave (like Eset for one).