this post was submitted on 16 Apr 2026
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I am tired boss...

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[–] LiveLM@lemmy.zip 10 points 11 hours ago (1 children)

Idk why they tied it to the Thunderbird name but cool I guess

[–] Sunny@slrpnk.net 5 points 5 hours ago

But its kinda taken....

[–] InFerNo@lemmy.ml 7 points 12 hours ago (1 children)

Does this have anything to do with Thunderbird? I'm confused.

[–] CyberSeeker@discuss.tchncs.de 5 points 8 hours ago

From what I can see, this is something the Thunderbird team had developed for their own internal tooling, and they’re open sourcing it.

[–] Jyek@sh.itjust.works 0 points 5 hours ago

So like, another open source competitor to LM Studio and OpenWebUI? Roadmap lists Ollama support. Honestly, this is pretty cool. I'm not sure what all the whinging in this thread is about. Are y'all mad because it's AI related? This is specifically a tool for you to use AI without needing to pay the data centers or the proprietary enterprise AI companies... Self hosting an LLM is exactly what we should be doing with it.

[–] Grass@sh.itjust.works 13 points 15 hours ago (1 children)

literally all they had to do was maintain the good old status quo and everyone would have loved them for it

[–] tb_@lemmy.world 15 points 13 hours ago (1 children)

I don't think their market share/relevance would start rising if they just maintained the status quo.

Which isn't to say this direction is great or the way to go about it, but they can't do nothing either.

[–] sixty@sh.itjust.works 1 points 5 hours ago

Yeah, maintaining status quo sadly means dwindling away

[–] smeg@infosec.pub 124 points 1 day ago (1 children)
[–] Sunny@slrpnk.net 62 points 1 day ago (2 children)

Indeed... As far as I know at least the Thunderbird donations are not going towards this, its Mozilla funded. I just cannot see that anyone asked or needed this, such a waste of time that should have gonw towards Thunderbird.

[–] XLE@piefed.social 26 points 1 day ago (5 children)

If anybody needs to know: this is why you should not not donate to the Mozilla Foundation. No money goes towards Firefox or Thunderbird through it!

The products I care about:

  • Firefox is funded by Google
  • Thunderbird is funded by donations

The groups I don't:

  • "Thunderbolt is funded through a dedicated investment from Mozilla",
  • ...and Mozilla is funded by separate donations too.
[–] nymnympseudonym@piefed.social 21 points 19 hours ago (1 children)

You opened my eyes

spoilerzGEe4A8oKgOau3a.png

[–] Rekall_Incorporated@piefed.social 24 points 16 hours ago (2 children)

Keep in mind that that there is a strong likelihood that XLE is a demagogue and is dedicated to shitting up any mozilla/Firefox/TB thread with lies and gross exaggerations that function as lies. XLE almost certainly does not use Firefox or Thunderbird (it wouldn't make sense considering their posting history).

XLE claimed that "Firefox is bursting at the seams with ads." This is clearly not true.

As an example they cited "sponsored search suggestions", which to my mind isn't a big deal and can easily be disabled. For the sake of transparency, I will note that I've never got them and it seems I can't enable them even if I wanted to (likely due to my region?)

XLE also claimed that the on-hover sponsorship notice for the Firefox weather widget as an example of "Firefox bursting at the seam with ads." I haven't used the default new tab page in a decade plus, so maybe this impacts how I see things. From my perspective, an on-hover sponsorship notice for optional widgets is a misleading example for their claims.

You can make up your own mind and read our conversation here: https://piefed.social/comment/10831188

P.S. I am not saying you shouldn't cancel your donation. I've donated to Mozilla Foundation before and cancelled, so I would be a hypocrite for defending donations to MF.

I also have a more hard-line position on MF; they've turned into a shitty, corrupt American tech company imitation. All open source foundations based in the US are suspect by definition (including Linux foundation, Debian foundation etc.) as US society is in a state where it is extremely unlikely that crime and corruption will be addressed in the next 20 years (I've lived in the US for several years, as well as other countries across NA, Europe and Asia).

But that doesn't mean you should trust an individual like XLE, who muddies the water with bombastic BS, while at the same time defending Brave; an American criminal gang that was caught re-writing referral URLs for their own financial benefit.

[–] nymnympseudonym@piefed.social 9 points 10 hours ago (1 children)
[–] XLE@piefed.social 4 points 9 hours ago

The thread Rekall linked shows me defending Waterfox, a more ethical Firefox fork, getting browser-based (read: fast) ad blocking installed and enabled by default.

Brave does suck, and this is a much better article about why IMO: https://thelibre.news/no-really-dont-use-brave/

[–] XLE@piefed.social 5 points 10 hours ago (1 children)

You linked to me praising Waterfox, which is a Firefox fork, for blocking ads by default with a method that's faster than with extensions.

I listed six sponsored things people will see on a new Firefox installation, things you admitted you don't see because you run a "heavily customized" copy of it. You can claim I don't know what I'm talking about, but things don't stop being ads just because you ~~don't see~~ don't mind them.

[–] Rekall_Incorporated@piefed.social -4 points 9 hours ago (1 children)

I stand by what I said. I will let people read my comment in this thread and our comments in this post (there are multiple threads that are relevant):

https://piefed.social/c/opensource/p/1952631/waterfox-to-integrate-brave-adblock-engine-with-search-ads-enabled-by-default

Let people make up their own minds.

[–] XLE@piefed.social 4 points 9 hours ago

What are people supposed to see? That you nitpicked my statements, accused me of not addressing every nitpick, and when I finally did... You decided to leave and then continue the argument here (not addressed to me but specifically complaining about that detail)?

Seems way more like you're just dredging up days-old personal drama disguised as a callout post.

For the record, I'm not a fan of Brave and its bigotry and unethical practices, and that extends to every company that engages in the same.

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[–] knobbysideup@sh.itjust.works 47 points 23 hours ago (1 children)

God dammit. All the whining they do about needing donations to keep developing and this is what they come up with.

[–] Sunny@slrpnk.net 11 points 15 hours ago

This is actually funded by Mozilla, not Thunderbird donations.

[–] harmbugler@piefed.social 26 points 21 hours ago (3 children)

Sounds like this is in the same space as OpenWebUI? It would be good to have some more choice there.

[–] Rekall_Incorporated@piefed.social 20 points 16 hours ago

At last a useful comment thread about the actual functionality in question.

While I am not moving back to reddit, Threadiverse is just terrible on any nuanced conversations on modern ML tools and approaches.

The tech is not the issue here. It has legitimate use cases and it is here to stay (this is not a blockchain pump and dump scheme ala Web 3.0). The issue here are American tech companies and broader support for crime/corruption in US society (as of today, doesn't mean that this can't/won't change in 20-30 years). We need truly independent open source systems and tools.

I am aware OpenWebUI is based in San Francisco and Mozilla Foundation is based in the US. I am always on the lookout for alternatives.

[–] CyberSeeker@discuss.tchncs.de 21 points 20 hours ago* (last edited 20 hours ago) (2 children)

It sounds like a step further than open-webui; it’s an enterprise grade client-server model for access to agents, workflows, and centralized knowledge repositories for RAG.

In addition to local chatbot for executive/admin use, I can see this being the backend for developers running Cursor or some other AI enhanced IDE, with local knowledge stores holding proprietary documents and running against local large models.

I am also curious about time share and prioritization of resources; I assume it would queue simultaneous requests. Presumably this would let you more effectively pool local compute, rather than providing A100 GPUs to each developer that may sit unused when they’re not working.

Edit: Somewhat impressively, this whole stack does not even include a local inference provider; so it does everything except local models right now, and requests are forwarded to cloud inference providers (Anthropic, OpenAI, etc). But it does have the backend started for rate limiting and queuing, and true “fully offline/local” is on the roadmap, just not there yet.

[–] ikidd@lemmy.world 1 points 35 minutes ago* (last edited 32 minutes ago)

Where are you seeing that it's useable for RAG? I've gone through the github and not seeing anyting very specific that way.

Edit: good lord their documentation is shit. Spend a few tokens on a proper mkdocs site or something.

[–] CyberSeeker@discuss.tchncs.de 8 points 19 hours ago* (last edited 19 hours ago) (1 children)

After reading through the GitHub docs, the most impressive thing is that they open sourced their Thunderbolt coding agent for Claude Code. There are quite a few skills available for implementation planning, dependency/build environment setup, coding, linting/cleanup, QA, and managing agent pull requests. Pretty good examples if you are looking at building Claude Code skills.

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[–] neclimdul@lemmy.world 31 points 23 hours ago (1 children)

Thunderbird team unveils... 🙂 thunderbolt... 😃self-hostable... 🤯AI😒client 😓

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[–] imetators@lemmy.dbzer0.com 0 points 8 hours ago

Prepare to be sued by Apple? I know one is LLM and the other is an interface standard. Not a great choice of a name I may say.

[–] corbindallas@fedinsfw.app 27 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (2 children)

 “Organizations are recognizing that AI is too important to outsource.” RYAN SIPES, CEO, MZLA TECHNOLOGIES

  Thunderbolt is a product of MZLA Technologies Corporation, a wholly owned subsidiary of Mozilla Foundation.

Well guys... It's endorsed by the CEO.

so there's that

[–] Sunny@slrpnk.net 15 points 1 day ago (20 children)

Omg take my money!! 💸💸💸💸

Seriously loosing whatever faith i had left in Mozilla... I want to love them so badly, but this just hurts.

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[–] Cherry@piefed.social 2 points 16 hours ago

AND all caps “trusted by organisations that don’t compromise”

TBH that sounds like a warning.

[–] Exec@pawb.social 18 points 1 day ago (1 children)

This logo reminds me of Nullsoft Winamp

[–] corbindallas@fedinsfw.app 14 points 1 day ago

It really eats.. the llamas ass

[–] 01189998819991197253@infosec.pub 8 points 22 hours ago* (last edited 22 hours ago) (3 children)

I can get behind this concept for those that want email summaries, I suppose. But absolutely not from a donation run nonprofit who was told time and again that we do not want ai shoved in every orifice.

Edit. Autocorrect

[–] Evil_Shrubbery@thelemmy.club 5 points 15 hours ago* (last edited 15 hours ago)

However an AI by a nonprofit is the only kind of AI I would potentially use.

I'm not against the LLM tech, it's that by using it I would support the shittiest of megacorps that use their power for evil (from training data to direct politics, and let's not forget markets disruptions).

AI by a for-profit has guaranteed enshitification built into the business model, otherwise they wouldn't get any capital.

[–] badgermurphy@lemmy.world 6 points 19 hours ago* (last edited 19 hours ago)

I have read summaries of emails and meetings that had the action items all sorts of wrong, sometimes completely inverted.

It seems to me that if an email or meeting is at all important, the stakes are too high to trust the summary, and if it is not important, neither is its summary.

Add on to that the fact that locally running LLMs are even more scatterbrained, I don't see how this fills even the limited need you're describing in any useful way.

So, they spent their limited available manpower on an unrequested feature, and to add insult to injury, the feature is unlikely to have effective practical uses. It might be capable of more limited scope text prediction like code auto-complete, but the field is already flooded with those. I think the Thunderbird users have far more use from improvements to Thunderbird than they do for other unrelated products.

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