Bonum Certa Men Certa

Totally Legit Gemini Search (TLGS), a Search Provider Just Announced for Gemini Space, Will Help Move More of Us Off the World Wide Web

Video download link | md5sum 7eb4b3a6838dfa20f824d31556da50be



Summary: The state of the Internet isn't great, but it's a lot worse when it comes to the Web; it became a hub of spying and malicious activity, so in this video I explain why we're moving away from Firefox and, where possible, embrace gemini:// as well

THE World Wide Web is not in a healthy state. The committee which controls the World Wide Web is stacked by monopolies. It has gone on for about a decade already and years ago they added DRM (EME) on top of it. Mozilla too went along with that agenda...

In the video above I mostly discuss why I'm giving up on Mozilla; the 'last straw' or the breaking point was some time this month and it isn't limited to Mozilla's latest controversial ambition. It's trying to relay (or grab) people's mail (links [1-3] at the bottom). So at the start of the week both Ryan and I started documenting some essential facts and more of us in IRC started moving from Firefox to something else. We don't typically use Firefox as a primary Web browser regardless, but why ever use it if Firefox is controlled by surveillance ogres?

For that matter, I am truly concerned about Thunderbird, as the video above explains. It's being gutted. There are no forks of it, so Mozilla still controls (or harms) millions of existing Thunderbird users (along with extension developers). Mozilla's CEO, the Chef and Baker, didn't think too highly of Thunderbird. She actually dismissed if not blasted Thunderbird about a decade back. She insinuated that people moving to Gmail is OK (spoiler: Google's money pays her over 3 million dollars a year). She attacked the very concept of decentralised E-mail. Gmail is antithetical to it. She does not (or does not wish to) understand Thunderbird users.

The way I see it, today's Mozilla milks the "goodwill ambassador" status of Firefox (which the community advocated, free of charge, for the benefit of Mozilla Corporation) in the same way frauds and charlatans who run the Linux Foundation milk "Linux" (which they do not even use!!!) to death...

Why would you trust Mozilla with your E-mail? Of with your passwords? Of your browsing history? It handles bugs (by taking data from users), sure, but that's for the technical staff, not the sales executives at Mozilla. They hired from companies like Facebook and the Board includes Microsoft (no wonder Mozilla increasingly acts like Microsoft's slave [1, 2, 3]). The company is circling down the drain and now it (mis)uses Firefox as a brand to entice you to give them DNS queries (through partners), Internet traffic (VPN), and even your emails (Mozilla is spying on people; don't be misled by the PR). I've had enough!

"One noteworthy downside is that by default LibreWolf is very strict -- even too strict by "Libre" standards -- to the point of being unusable for most people."Both my wife and I have migrated our data from Firefox to LibreWolf. Earlier today I nearly completed the migration and Ryan posted some tips last night [4]; applicable only for newer versions of Firefox, i.e. not the ESR in Debian (it lacks export option for passwords, for instance). One noteworthy downside is that by default LibreWolf is very strict -- even too strict by "Libre" standards -- to the point of being unusable for most people. And it defaults to a Microsoft 'proxy' for search. Maybe we'll do a HowTo related to this one day. Moreover, LibreWolf pretends to be "FirefoxDesktop on Windows" (or something to that effect) even when you use it on GNU/Linux, which means that Web statistics will inevitably give a false impression of Microsoft Windows being bigger than it actually is (not a new problem).

I get to the main point of the video only in the last 5 minutes or so (the sound quality will improve as we adapt to a new workflow). One hour before recording the video we found another new encouraging development in Gemini Space (or Geminispace).

"After some testing by my friends and talking to René," said the announcement around 1PM, "I'm excited to share my new search provider for the Gemini protocol, TLGS" (already quite good and accessible at gemini://tlgs.one).

So far, based on some tests (e.g. searches about Techrights and Mozilla in the video above), the TLGS capsule/search engine works better than the other (existing) ones...

Based on this page, TLGS Search has indexed (for search) 80,000 pages so far...

it's a great start!

"'Fixing' the World Wide Web is too ambitious an aspiration because once something enters the formal specifications/standards it's very difficult to undo."That's quite a lot and it doesn't include much cruft.

We hope that a bunch of notable scandals, both large and small, will encourage people to reassess their choice of Web browsers and maybe explore a move to Gemini. There's already a lot of good material there. No spying, no advertising, no affiliate marketing in links. Totally Legit Gemini Search (TLGS), as per its site, "is an experimental search engine for contents served over the Gemini Protocol. It crawls and indexes textual contents that it encounters in the Geminispace. And provides a [sic] interface for people to look for what they need. The interface is heavly [sic] inspired by GUS and geminispace.info."

The World Wide Web was great in the 1990s. Then it was abused by Microsoft, it sort of recovered for a while (owing largely to Firefox), but now it seems beyond redemption. 'Fixing' the World Wide Web is too ambitious an aspiration because once something enters the formal specifications/standards it's very difficult to undo. Tim Berners-Lee had a chance to say "No!" to DRM and other nasty stuff. But he missed that chance, wilfully...

Related/contextual items from the news:



  1. Firefox Relay is Now Out of Beta & Adds New Premium Plan to Help Protect Your Real Email Address - It's FOSS News

    Firefox Relay aims to help you protect your real email address by providing email aliases.

    While good options like Simplelogin, and AnonAddy already exists, Mozilla’s Firefox Relay can encourage more users to use email aliases.

    For a while, it was in the beta phase with limited access to features. Now, as per the official announcement, it is available for all users, out of beta, and introduces a premium plan to unlock all features.

  2. Support.Mozilla.Org: Introducing Firefox Relay Premium

    If you’re a fan of Firefox Relay, you may have been waiting for the day when you can add more aliases. After a long wait, you can now celebrate because we’re launching Firefox Relay Premium today.

    As a refresher, Firefox Relay is a free service available at relay.firefox.com where you’ll get five email aliases to use whenever you sign-up for an online account. Today, Firefox Relay is launching as a premium subscription where you can unlock unlimited aliases and additional features.



  3. The Mozilla Blog: Firefox Relay now available with more email aliases with Premium service, protecting your identity and email addresses from spammers

    Today, Firefox Relay, a privacy-first and free product that hides your real email address to help protect your identity, is available with a new paid Premium service offering. The release comes just in time for the holiday season to help spare your inbox from being inundated with emails from e-commerce sites, especially those sites where you may shop or visit a few times a year.

    In real life you have a phone number where family and friends can call and reach out to you directly. You likely have it memorized by heart and it’s something you’ve had for years. In your online life your email address is like your phone number, it’s a personal and unique identifier. Your email address has become the way we login and access almost every website, app, newsletter, and hundreds of other interactions we have online every single day. That means your email address is in the hands of hundreds, if not thousands, of third parties. As you think more about your email address and the places it’s being used, Firefox Relay can help protect and limit where it’s being shared.

    Firefox Relay is a free service available at relay.firefox.com where you’ll get five email aliases to use whenever you sign-up for an online account. Over the last year, the team has been experimenting with Firefox Relay, a smart, easy solution that can preserve the privacy of your email address. Firefox Relay was initially rolled out to a beta phase for early adopters who like to test new products. We heard back from beta testers who provided feedback where we improved the free service and added a new paid Premium service that we’re introducing today.



  4. How to backup your passwords from Firefox and import them into a fresh copy, or LibreWolf, without Firefox Sync.

    Mozilla implemented support for importing CSV-formatted password lists generated by Firefox or other Web browsers, but it’s hiding by default.

    It’s fairly clear that Mozilla wants everyone to be pressured to create an account to use their Web browser. That way all of your browsing data is stored on a server you have no control over, and Mozilla may not either.

    (We don’t know if they farm this out to Clown Computing partners like Microsoft or Amazon.)

    To enable password import in Firefox or LibreWolf, type about:config into the address bar and hit enter, agree that you’ll be careful.

    Search for this entry:

    browser.bookmarks.addedImportButton

    Double click to make it True.

    Now you are able to import passwords in CSV format. You should be able to export passwords from another browser and into Firefox or LibreWolf (where there is no Firefox Sync, due to privacy reasons), without needing any pesky Sync servers.



Recent Techrights' Posts

Gemini Links 22/05/2026: Esperanto Music History, Suspicious Adoption of Signal, and Unauthorised LLM Slop in Code
Links for the day
Techrights and Tux Machines Subjected to Cyberattacks for Several Weeks
In the past I spoke to the cybercrime unit of British Police. Maybe it's time to do so again.
 
EPO Staff Representation Speaks of This Week's Discussion With the EPO's Budget and Finance Committee (BFC) Amid Mass Strikes
The Central Staff Committee's outline (prepared in a rush) or the "flash report"
SLAPP Censorship - Part 84 Out of 200: New Legislation Against SLAPPs on the Way (After We Reached Out to Ministers)
They dealt with the matter individually too, but we won't share this in public, at least not at this time
The Corrupt Lecture the Non-Corrupt - Part XXX - Where Was "The Ethics and Compliance Team" When the Family of EPO President Campinos Was Caught Doing Cocaine?
It remains to be seen if national delegates will tolerate this in future meetings
Over at Tux Machines...
GNU/Linux news for the past day
IRC Proceedings: Thursday, May 21, 2026
IRC logs for Thursday, May 21, 2026
Links 21/05/2026: "Declining America" and Why Slop 'Code' is Made to Fail
Links for the day
The Register MS Has Become a 'Content' Farm Promoting Slop for Hostile Corporations
Now they call it "PARTNER CONTENT" - not "SPONSORED" - as if semantics make the difference
Latest Example of Widespread Fake Assertions (False News) About "Hey Hi"
The false narrative of "Hey Hi layoffs"
Links 21/05/2026: Facebook Rewarded With Tax Breaks to Destroy the Environment and Cause Global Warming, Shortages, Pollution; SpaceX (SPCX) Continues Losing Billions of Dollars
Links for the day
Codecs and Software Patents - Part VIII - GNU Audio/Video Team Has Chosen the AV1 Video Codec and It Explains Why (They've Researched Their Options)
AV1 video codec will be used to encode and share GNU videos online
Dr. Stallman Helps Establish Free Software Advocacy Outside the Free Software Foundation (FSF) as Well
The ideals or principles of Free Software needn't be centralised or monopolised; they can be federated
22 Years of Tux Machines and a Community Stronger Than Ever Before
We've already received some feedback from the community and improved it accordingly
Microsoft Under Investigation for Breaches of Law in the UK
Just like the Microsofters
More Microsoft Layoffs on the Way (June and July 2026)
with or without PIPs
LWN Sponsored by the Linux Foundation (Monopolies)
We must be able to casually point this out
The Corrupt Lecture the Non-Corrupt - Part XXIX - European Patent Office (EPO) Tells Staff "Speaking up" is Good, But Not When the "Brother-in-law" of EPO's President Does Cocaine
Do we still have a functioning democracy and potent press?
Over at Tux Machines...
GNU/Linux news for the past day
IRC Proceedings: Wednesday, May 20, 2026
IRC logs for Wednesday, May 20, 2026
Gemini Links 21/05/2026: Immigration, Slop, and Slop 'Code' Suggestions Infesting Code Repositories
Links for the dayGemini Links 21/05/2026: Immigration, Slop, and Slop 'Code' Suggestions Infesting Code Repositories
GAFAM is Connected to Misogyny, Almost All Founders Divorced
They're not good people, even if they pay the media to pretend otherwise
SLAPP Censorship - Part 83 Out of 200: Religion is Still Alive, But for Many This Religion is Monetary (Greed, Monopolies, Corporate Power)
If all you keep boasting about is being able to afford a hotel room and some domestic flight, then maybe you have no real accomplishments and are more like a "Facebook serf" with a credit card
Oracle Seems to Have Popularised Overnight Layoffs, Now GAFAM Does the Same
layoff emails at 4 a.m. local time
A Lot of Fake News About Microsoft's LinkedIn Today, Some Comes From Slopfarms, Some Relies on Those Slopfarms
As usual, slopfarms make the Web a huge pile of garbage
IBM's Kyndryl is Circling Down the Drain, Say Kyndryl Insiders
"IBM Dinosaurs who were recycled and catapulted into the orange trash heap by IBM"
A Lot of Coverage Adding Hype Factor to Slop Bug Reports... is Made by LLM Slop
Local Privilege Escalation [...] the slop motivates some actual people to keep writing about it
Links 20/05/2026: Mass Layoffs at NPR (Bought by the Ballmers and Bill Epsteingate), Starbucks Korea CEO Fired Over ‘Tank Day’ Ad
Links for the day
Gemini Links 20/05/2026: Advantage of CD Collections, Geminaut's View of Nostr, and SSL / TLS Certificates
Links for the day
IBM is Becoming a Pile of Expired Patents and Abandoned Buildings, Assets of Little Actual Value
Having laid off a ton of people, borrowed lots of money to fake growth (by acquisition), and sent some jobs to low-paid regions where innovation isn't done
Links 20/05/2026: Looting of Americans for "White Grievance Reparations Fund"; "Mark Zuckerberg Used Shell Companies to Bully Native Hawaiians"
Links for the day
Web Browsers Are for Rendering Web Page, They Shouldn't Become PDF Editors
Linus Torvalds is quickly learning and speaking about this
SLAPP Censorship - Part 82 Out of 200: British Government Intervenes in the SLAPPs by Brett Wilson LLP
At this stage our matters are dealt with by a layer below that of the Prime Minister (adjacent to it)
LinkedIn Communications Reveal That LinkedIn - Like GitHub - Will Vanish Inside the Belly of Microsoft
This is definitely going to happen.
In Wall Street, Financial Difficulties Drive Shares Up
Wall Street doesn't work that way
The Corrupt Lecture the Non-Corrupt - Part XXVIII - European Patent Office (EPO) Guidebook Says Report Crimes Committed on EPO Premises. Some Did, But President Campinos Covers up for the Culprits.
The staff has long been on strike and the union (SUEPO) organised an enhanced day of action just two days ago
Gemini Links 20/05/2026: Fall of an Empire, "High Tech is a Social Exercise", and Big Cameras
Links for the day
Over at Tux Machines...
GNU/Linux news for the past day
IRC Proceedings: Tuesday, May 19, 2026
IRC logs for Tuesday, May 19, 2026