this post was submitted on 21 Dec 2025
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After the controversial news shared earlier this week by Mozilla’s new CEO that Firefox will evolve into “a modern AI browser,” the company now revealed it is working on an AI kill switch for the open-source web browser.

On Tuesday, Anthony Enzor-DeMeo was named the new CEO of Mozilla Corporation, the company behind the beloved Firefox web browser used by almost all GNU/Linux distributions as the default browser.

In his message as new CEO, Anthony Enzor-DeMeo stated that Firefox will grow from a browser into a broader ecosystem of trusted software while remaining the company’s anchor, and that Firefox will evolve into a modern AI browser and support a portfolio of new and trusted software additions.

What was not made clear is that Firefox will also ship with an AI kill switch that will let users completely disable all the AI features that are included in Firefox. Mozilla shared this important update earlier today to make it clear to everyone that Firefox will still be a trusted web browser.

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[–] ricecake@sh.itjust.works 12 points 1 day ago (1 children)

It's really not. The people who invented the term "artificial intelligence" both meant something different than you're thinking the term means and also thought human level intelligence was far simpler to model than it turned out to be.

You're thinking of intelligence as compared to a human, and they were thinking of intelligence as compared to a wood chipper. The computers of the time executed much more mechanical tasks, like moving text into place on a printer layout.
They aimed to intelligence, where intelligence was understood as tasks that were more than just rote computation but responded to the environment they executed in. Text layout by knowing how to do line breaks and change font sizes. Parsing word context to know if something is a typo.
These tasks require something more than rote mechanical action. They're far from human intelligence, and entirely lacking in the introspective or adaptive qualities that we associate with humans, but they're still responsive.

Using AI only to refer to human intelligence is the missuse of the term by writers and television producers.

The people who coined the terms would have found it quaint to say something isn't intelligence because it consists of math and fancy scripting. Their efforts were predicated on the assumption that human intelligence was nothing more than math, and programming in general is an extremely abstract form of math.

[–] lapping6596@lemmy.world 5 points 1 day ago (1 children)

To add an example, in video games we call it AI whenever the enemy appears to make a choice.

[–] ricecake@sh.itjust.works 4 points 1 day ago

Yup, that's a good one.

Purely for discussions sake, I'd say that the video game entity is making a choice, but it lacks volition.
No freewill or consciousness, but it's selecting a course of action based on environment circumstances.