Ephera is the OP you responded to, not the OP of the post.
If your feedback is “Don’t roll these out!”, you’re still free to give that feedback
This is the context I’m referring to. Their response highlights that they’re not interested in talking about management structure, only the specific technical issues with the feature. They’ve been incredibly consistent about that.
You went on a tangent about business direction. They responded they’re not interested in that, and if that’s the way you want to engage, keep the developers out of it because it’s completely unhelpful (i.e. don’t post stuff like that on their bugzilla, which is unfortunately all to common). I don’t think OP is implying that criticizing management decisions isn’t worth doing, there’s just a more helpful way to do that than including it in a technical discussion.
It’s irrelevant to the discussion at hand. Whether I agree with you (I do) has nothing to do with the shopping feature implementation.
If you have technical issues with the shopping feature, bring it up with the developers. If you have policy issues for the management, name and shame with an open letter or similar.
If Mozilla included a virus in Firefox, I wouldn’t be suggesting bugfixes to make the virus more user friendly. I would point to the general ethos to not build viruses into their software.
And because Mozilla promises an open Web where you make the choices, hardcoding an addon that promotes the three biggest retailers and a handful of paying advertisers is antithetical to that ethos too.
Ephera is not the OP. And Ephera decided to talk about business structure for some reason. Maybe you missed that too.
Ephera is the OP you responded to, not the OP of the post.
This is the context I’m referring to. Their response highlights that they’re not interested in talking about management structure, only the specific technical issues with the feature. They’ve been incredibly consistent about that.
You went on a tangent about business direction. They responded they’re not interested in that, and if that’s the way you want to engage, keep the developers out of it because it’s completely unhelpful (i.e. don’t post stuff like that on their bugzilla, which is unfortunately all to common). I don’t think OP is implying that criticizing management decisions isn’t worth doing, there’s just a more helpful way to do that than including it in a technical discussion.
So you have no issue with the validity of my complaint?
You just want to argue pedantics? No thank you
It’s irrelevant to the discussion at hand. Whether I agree with you (I do) has nothing to do with the shopping feature implementation.
If you have technical issues with the shopping feature, bring it up with the developers. If you have policy issues for the management, name and shame with an open letter or similar.
Ethos is crucial to code recommendations.
If Mozilla included a virus in Firefox, I wouldn’t be suggesting bugfixes to make the virus more user friendly. I would point to the general ethos to not build viruses into their software.
And because Mozilla promises an open Web where you make the choices, hardcoding an addon that promotes the three biggest retailers and a handful of paying advertisers is antithetical to that ethos too.