You keep accusing people of being nihilistic / cynical in this thread. It isn't cynical to be extremely skeptical of any company's ability to keep your data private and safe given the constant barrage of breeches and ethical violations.
Maybe I'm in the minority but Mozilla's brand had been permanently tarnished in recent years and I do not think of them as a 'privacy first' organization
> It isn't cynical to be extremely skeptical of any company's ability to keep your data private and safe
By dictionary definition, cynicism is an attitude of scornful or jaded negativity, especially a general distrust of the integrity or professed motives of others.
Skepticism is defined as the doubt as to the truth of something.
Extreme doubt as to the integrity of a company’s data privacy practices is the dictionary definition of cynicism.
> I do not think of them as a 'privacy first' organization
I won’t pry, but I suspect that you are not a web developer, by trade.
It is common knowledge in the web development field that Mozilla is a, if not the, standard bearer for consumer privacy protection in the browser wars.
Like I mentioned, there are perfect legitimate reasons and need to do it.
However, the best privacy practice is to never share it. If you share, then it is no longer privacy first. The goals which one wants to achieve come first. I'm not saying it will not have adequate privacy protection. But it's not "privacy first" because it introduces the risk to someone's privacy for the benefit of something. That something comes first.
That’s rather cynical.
What’s wrong with someone wanting to share their data with certain people while also demanding that those people respect the data’s privacy?