Sources: Mozilla expected to extend its Google search deal
Mozilla and Google are expected to extend their current search deal for another three years, multiple sources have told ZDNet. The new search deal will ensure Google remains the default search engine provider inside the Firefox browser until 2023 at an estimated price tag of around $400 million to $450 million per year. Mozilla officials are expected to announce the search deal's extension later this fall, in November, when the organization is scheduled to disclose its 2019 financial figures. Terms of the new deal were leaked to this reporter after Mozilla announced plans to lay off more than 250 employees on Wednesday in a move that had many users fearing for the browser maker's future, as Mozilla's current Google search deal was scheduled to expire at the end of the year. However, several sources have confirmed that the organization is sound financially, and the layoffs were part of a restructuring of its core business, with Mozilla moving away from its current role of internet standards steward and experimental approach to its product catalog to more commercially-viable offerings that generate revenues on their own. Work on open standards and protocols will take a backseat to commercialization efforts in the short-term, but Mozilla doesn't plan to phase out its work in the web development community completely and will most likely come back to its role of web custodian once its subscription-based services ensure long-term business survivability. Current plans include shoring up and expanding its recently-launched VPN service and, maybe, dipping its toes into acquiring new tech ventures that could be seamlessly integrated into its product catalog as self-standing revenue-generating streams. Reached out for comment, a Mozilla spokesperson said the organization had nothing to comment at this point; however, in a response post-publication, Mozilla confirmed our report and provided the following statement: "Mozilla's search partnership with Google is ongoing, with Google as the default search provider in the Firefox browser in many places around the world. We've recently extended the partnership, and the relationship isn't changing." https://www.zdnet.com/article/sources-mozilla-expected-to-extend-its-google-... Giacomo
Ciao Giacomo, eh il meraviglioso mondo della finanza! Giacomo Tesio <giacomo@tesio.it> writes:
Mozilla and Google are expected to extend their current search deal for another three years, multiple sources have told ZDNet.
mi pare nulla di nuovo rispetto a quello che succede da almeno 15 anni a questa parte
The new search deal will ensure Google remains the default search engine provider inside the Firefox browser until 2023 at an estimated price tag of around $400 million to $450 million per year.
Da quello che si sa, dal 2005 a oggi Mozilla Corporation e Mozilla Foundation assieme raccimolano finanziariamente poco più di quello che Google paga loro per mantenere Google come motore di ricerca di default in Mozilla Firefox (e gli altri browser storici ormai obsoleti) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mozilla_Corporation#Affiliations La tabella riportata nella pagina citata sopra riporta - fino al 2011 - una media di più dell'85% del totale delle entrate proveniente dall'accordo con Google. Nel 2018, anno dell'ultimo annual report AFAIU, Mozilla Corporation e Foundation assieme hanno incassato $436 milioni [1]... quindi non esagero se dico che è altamente probabile che il 95% delle entrate 2020 di Mozilla proverranno dal rinnovo di questo accordo. Detto in altre parole: Google e pochi altri spaventosi colossi tecno-finanziari possono "comperarsi" quello che vogliono, senza chiedere il permesso a nessuno, perfino l'antitrust fa loro un simpatico solletico. [...] Per fortuna a noi è ancora concesso riconfigurare il browser per modificare il motore di ricerca utilizzato di default; ADDIRITTURA alcuni *alchimisti* sono persino in grado di alterare il codice dei browser per TENTARE di limitare l'esagerata ingordigia dei padroni del web. Ciao, Gio'. [1] il "net income" 2019 di Alphabet Inc. è di 34.3 miliardi di dollari (a spanne due manovre finanziarie di un paese come l'Italia in tempi pre-recovery-fund) P.S.: voglio proprio vedere cosa succederà quando sarà un colosso cinese a fare una proposta che non si può rifiutare :-O -- Giovanni Biscuolo
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Giovanni Biscuolo