The ads will be displayed in the Live tiles

Sep 13, 2015 15:33 GMT  ·  By

Mozilla wants to keep Firefox profitable, and one of the means to do that is with ads. They can't just slap them all over the place, so they are going to be shown in the tiles, where they should be the least problematic.

Users don't like ads in their products, and they certainly don't enjoy them in an application that is built to surf the Internet, a place full of ads itself. On the other hand, Mozilla wants to make money, and it's not longer making $240 million dollars a year from its Google partnership. Yes, you read that right, but that was all the way back in 2012.

Firefox is no longer ahead of Google Chrome, and Google is not giving Mozilla the same kind of cash that it used to, so they need to get that money through other means. Ads inside the browser seem like the only idea that's left on the table.

Users won't be thrilled

The community made it clear that they wouldn't tolerate this, but on the other hand, the community doesn't seem to have a lot of power. Suggested Tiles have been available in the US version of the browser for some time now, so this "feature" has been in the works for a while.

Mozilla is saying stuff like "improve the state of digital advertising," "promoting content," "adding value," and so on. This is some first-class corporate jargon, but in the end, it all means the same thing: ads in the browser. To be fair, for now, Mozilla is not getting any money, and it's working with partners like Make-a-Wish Foundation.

"Since early August, we have been delivering promoted content provided by our first wave of partners including Yahoo, a number of top-tier news titles including Fortune Magazine and Quartz, and mission-oriented partners such as the Make-a-Wish Foundation and the Electronic Frontier Foundation," noted Mozilla's Darren Herman.

Privacy is an issue, and they know it

Mozilla has been keen to remind everyone that they don't intend to collect any kind of data, that the ads will be transparent, and that users will be able to know why they see a particular ad.

Even with all the assurances, it will be a hard pill to swallow for the users and it remains to be seen just how well Mozilla will disguise this.