In 2023, a significant portion of Firefox downloads came from unknown sources. We believe many of them came from 3rd party websites that let you download Firefox. While some websites are okay, others can put you at risk of downloading an old version or a build with the wrong locale, leading to security risks, a bad user experience, or even malicious installations.

Help the Firefox team to uncover this mystery by taking part in the Firefox 3rd-party installer campaign!

There will be swag, and you’ll be featured in our blog if you manage to report 10 valid reports. So don’t forget to invite your friends too!

Have any questions about this campaign? Join us on Matrix or watch the recording of the SUMO community call with Romain Testard, Principal Product Manager at Mozilla.

Please also help spread the word about this campaign by sharing this on your social media.

Keep on rocking the helpful web, The Mozilla Support team

  • anothermember
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    5 months ago

    What about Linux distribution repos? (in terms of where they fall in the known/unknown category)

  • Monument@lemmy.sdf.org
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    5 months ago

    I wonder where installs through Microsoft’s Software Center, or when updates are pushed to managed devices fall in the known vs unknown category.

    Completely anecdotal, but a lot more of colleagues use FF than I would have expected, and they only have one source for the software.

    • pingveno@lemmy.ml
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      5 months ago

      Why not? This seems to be aimed at scammers who could be injecting who knows what into the binaries and other third builds that may have grown stale over time. It’s obviously not aimed at well maintained forks like LibreWolf.