Sets the appropriate Firefox Suggest scenario based on the current Nimbus
rollout (if any) and “hardcoded” rollouts (if any). The possible scenarios
are:
history
This is the scenario when the user is not in any rollouts. Firefox
Suggest suggestions are disabled.
offline
This is the scenario for the “offline” rollout. Firefox Suggest
suggestions are enabled by default. Search strings and matching keywords
are not included in related telemetry. The onboarding dialog is not
shown.
online
This is the scenario for the “online” rollout. The onboarding dialog will
be shown and the user must opt in to enable Firefox Suggest suggestions
and related telemetry, which will include search strings and matching
keywords.
Related source code:
async _updateFirefoxSuggestScenarioHelper() {
let scenario = this._nimbus.quickSuggestScenario;
if (!scenario) {
await Region.init();
if (
Region.home == “US” &&
Services.locale.appLocaleAsBCP47.substring(0, 2) == “en”
) {
// offline rollout for en locales in the US region
scenario = “offline”;
} else {
// no rollout
scenario = “history”;
}
}
The code you cited just says that users with locale “en-US” are enrolled in the “offline” mode.
Basically:
locale = “en-US” => “offline” => opt-out
locale != “en-US” => “opt-in” with all possible dark patterns to trick the user into accepting it: user has to click the small “Not now” text which does not look like a button on the top right corner to disable Suggest.
To summarize, the “offline” / “online” Suggest Scenario have absolutely nothing to do with the fact that Firefox sends data to Mozilla or not, it only defines if the Suggest feature is opt-in or opt-out.
Is this naming extremely confusing? Absolutely! But at this point it’s clear that Mozilla has done everything possible to mislead users about what their “suggestions” really are.
So please, stop spreading misinformation while claiming that people trying to bring awareness about this awful “feature” are the ones providing false information. A code comment is not proof, your completely wrong interpretation of it even less so. If you don’t agree, please link to the relevant source code which would contradict the one I’ve linked to.
This is the scenario for the “offline” rollout. Firefox Suggest
suggestions are enabled by default. Search strings and matching keywords
are not included in related telemetry. The onboarding dialog is not
shown.
online
This is the scenario for the “online” rollout. The onboarding dialog will
be shown and the user must opt in to enable Firefox Suggest suggestions
and related telemetry, which will include search strings and matching
keywords.
“offline” - Search strings and matching keywords are not included in related telemetry.
“online” - user must opt in to enable Firefox Suggest suggestions and related telemetry, which will include search strings and matching keywords
Quoting from source code comment:
Sets the appropriate Firefox Suggest scenario based on the current Nimbus
Related source code:
async _updateFirefoxSuggestScenarioHelper() { let scenario = this._nimbus.quickSuggestScenario; if (!scenario) { await Region.init(); if ( Region.home == “US” && Services.locale.appLocaleAsBCP47.substring(0, 2) == “en” ) { // offline rollout for en locales in the US region scenario = “offline”; } else { // no rollout scenario = “history”; } }
I think this should be self explanatory.
And how would that support your claim that this post is:
The relevant parts from this code comment about the “offline” mode are:
Which correspond to the code I’ve already linked to.
case "offline": enabled = true; defaults.setBoolPref("quicksuggest.shouldShowOnboardingDialog", false); defaults.setBoolPref("suggest.quicksuggest", true); defaults.setBoolPref("suggest.quicksuggest.sponsored", true); break;
The code you cited just says that users with locale “en-US” are enrolled in the “offline” mode.
Basically:
To summarize, the “offline” / “online” Suggest Scenario have absolutely nothing to do with the fact that Firefox sends data to Mozilla or not, it only defines if the Suggest feature is opt-in or opt-out. Is this naming extremely confusing? Absolutely! But at this point it’s clear that Mozilla has done everything possible to mislead users about what their “suggestions” really are.
So please, stop spreading misinformation while claiming that people trying to bring awareness about this awful “feature” are the ones providing false information. A code comment is not proof, your completely wrong interpretation of it even less so. If you don’t agree, please link to the relevant source code which would contradict the one I’ve linked to.
Can you read the below stuff?
This is the scenario for the “offline” rollout. Firefox Suggest suggestions are enabled by default. Search strings and matching keywords are not included in related telemetry. The onboarding dialog is not shown. online This is the scenario for the “online” rollout. The onboarding dialog will be shown and the user must opt in to enable Firefox Suggest suggestions and related telemetry, which will include search strings and matching keywords.
“offline” - Search strings and matching keywords are not included in related telemetry.
“online” - user must opt in to enable Firefox Suggest suggestions and related telemetry, which will include search strings and matching keywords