- cross-posted to:
- linux@lemmy.ml
- firefox@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- linux@lemmy.ml
- firefox@lemmy.ml
Not sure why, if true. I doubt Russia is making up a large chunk of their economic funding.
Sometimes CEOs just get paranoid. You can either flip a switch an remove an app, or risk getting personally targeted by Russia.
Russia won’t get to you, most likely, but it’s the paranoia that gets you.
Russia don’t get anyone it’s always suicide by falling off a windows
Or off a boat, or suicide by radioactive materials, ya know, the usual ways
Forgot also about lot of suicide by shot behind the head
They’re the Mozilla CEO, I image they’d fall off a linux.
Weak
The extensions should be back online: https://discourse.mozilla.org/t/the-censorship-circumvention-extension-has-disappeared-from-the-russian-version-of-mozilla-addons/130914/38
deleted by creator
From the article:
The Intercept verified that all four add-ons are blocked in Russia. If the webpage for the add-on is accessed from a Russian IP address, the Mozilla add-on page displays a message: “The page you tried to access is not available in your region.” If the add-on is accessed with an IP address outside of Russia, the add-on page loads successfully.
deleted by creator
Yes, you’re right about that.
According to their forum the extensions are back online in Russia: https://discourse.mozilla.org/t/the-censorship-circumvention-extension-has-disappeared-from-the-russian-version-of-mozilla-addons/130914/38