+0.46 Firefox 70 (hacks.mozilla.org S:+0.40 )
1595 points by feross 2322 days ago | 457 comments on HN | Moderate positive Contested Editorial · v3.7 · 2026-02-28 10:28:23 0
Summary Technical Empowerment & Education Advocates
This technical blog post advocates for developer empowerment and web accessibility through Firefox 70 features, emphasizing open access to technical education and secure development practices. Content demonstrates strong commitment to freedom of expression through knowledge-sharing and active participation in technical culture without access barriers.
Article Heatmap
Preamble: ND — Preamble Preamble: No Data — Preamble P Article 1: ND — Freedom, Equality, Brotherhood Article 1: No Data — Freedom, Equality, Brotherhood 1 Article 2: ND — Non-Discrimination Article 2: No Data — Non-Discrimination 2 Article 3: ND — Life, Liberty, Security Article 3: No Data — Life, Liberty, Security 3 Article 4: ND — No Slavery Article 4: No Data — No Slavery 4 Article 5: ND — No Torture Article 5: No Data — No Torture 5 Article 6: ND — Legal Personhood Article 6: No Data — Legal Personhood 6 Article 7: ND — Equality Before Law Article 7: No Data — Equality Before Law 7 Article 8: ND — Right to Remedy Article 8: No Data — Right to Remedy 8 Article 9: ND — No Arbitrary Detention Article 9: No Data — No Arbitrary Detention 9 Article 10: ND — Fair Hearing Article 10: No Data — Fair Hearing 10 Article 11: ND — Presumption of Innocence Article 11: No Data — Presumption of Innocence 11 Article 12: +0.40 — Privacy 12 Article 13: ND — Freedom of Movement Article 13: No Data — Freedom of Movement 13 Article 14: ND — Asylum Article 14: No Data — Asylum 14 Article 15: ND — Nationality Article 15: No Data — Nationality 15 Article 16: ND — Marriage & Family Article 16: No Data — Marriage & Family 16 Article 17: ND — Property Article 17: No Data — Property 17 Article 18: ND — Freedom of Thought Article 18: No Data — Freedom of Thought 18 Article 19: +0.56 — Freedom of Expression 19 Article 20: ND — Assembly & Association Article 20: No Data — Assembly & Association 20 Article 21: ND — Political Participation Article 21: No Data — Political Participation 21 Article 22: ND — Social Security Article 22: No Data — Social Security 22 Article 23: ND — Work & Equal Pay Article 23: No Data — Work & Equal Pay 23 Article 24: ND — Rest & Leisure Article 24: No Data — Rest & Leisure 24 Article 25: ND — Standard of Living Article 25: No Data — Standard of Living 25 Article 26: +0.46 — Education 26 Article 27: +0.33 — Cultural Participation 27 Article 28: ND — Social & International Order Article 28: No Data — Social & International Order 28 Article 29: ND — Duties to Community Article 29: No Data — Duties to Community 29 Article 30: ND — No Destruction of Rights Article 30: No Data — No Destruction of Rights 30
Negative Neutral Positive No Data
Aggregates
Editorial Mean +0.46 Structural Mean +0.40
Weighted Mean +0.45 Unweighted Mean +0.44
Max +0.56 Article 19 Min +0.33 Article 27
Signal 4 No Data 27
Volatility 0.08 (Low)
Negative 0 Channels E: 0.6 S: 0.4
SETL +0.20 Editorial-dominant
FW Ratio 55% 12 facts · 10 inferences
Evidence 10% coverage
2H 2M 27 ND
Theme Radar
Foundation Security Legal Privacy & Movement Personal Expression Economic & Social Cultural Order & Duties Foundation: 0.00 (0 articles) Security: 0.00 (0 articles) Legal: 0.00 (0 articles) Privacy & Movement: 0.40 (1 articles) Personal: 0.00 (0 articles) Expression: 0.56 (1 articles) Economic & Social: 0.00 (0 articles) Cultural: 0.40 (2 articles) Order & Duties: 0.00 (0 articles)
HN Discussion 20 top-level · 30 replies
ar7hur 2019-10-22 14:18 UTC link
The one thing that prevents me from switching to Firefox is the spell checker. Like many non-native English people, I'm constantly switching between languages when typing. Chrome is smart with that, and detects the right language sentence per sentence. Is there a way to have FF do this? Did I miss something?
kemenaran 2019-10-22 14:27 UTC link
Not mentioned in this article (although it's in the Release Notes [1]): the amazing work done regarding the macOS compositor.

This should give pretty noticeable speed and battery improvements on Retina Macbooks.

[1] https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/70.0/releasenotes/#new

submeta 2019-10-22 14:33 UTC link
Love Firefox. The philosophy, its snappiness, its many add-ons, the UI. - Glad to have an alternative to Chrome! Keep up the good work, Mozilla & Firefox team.
theodorejb 2019-10-22 14:37 UTC link
Wow, blown away by how much better the new password manager is! If they add support for custom fields on each login, this could almost completely replace my need for a 3rd party solution.
marius_k 2019-10-22 14:52 UTC link
I noticed that firefox (dev edition) got rid of possibility to disable update notifications. I prefer my browser to be updated from repository rather than by itself. Did anyone has the same issue or found some workaround?
tyre 2019-10-22 14:58 UTC link
> Firefox 70 introduces three new properties related to text decoration/underline:

> text-decoration-thickness: sets the thickness of lines added via text-decoration.

> text-underline-offset: sets the distance between a text decoration and the text it is set on. Bear in mind that this only works on underlines.

> text-decoration-skip-ink: sets whether underlines and overlines are drawn if they cross descenders and ascenders. The default value, auto, causes them to only be drawn where they do not cross over a glyph. To allow underlines to cross glyphs, set the value to none.

I'm so excited for these. Implementing sane underlines for headers has been a pain in the ass for far too long. Writers rejoice!

ufo 2019-10-22 14:59 UTC link
Does anyone know how Firefox Lockwise compares to other password managers? For example, can it store additional notes next to the password?
danShumway 2019-10-22 15:02 UTC link
> Pause on DOM Mutation in Debugger

Heckin finally!

The dev tool improvements all seem good. Still no support for inline code edits, which means JS debugging will still be something of a pain, but strengthening Firefox's position as one of the better tools for debugging and prototyping CSS.

soulofmischief 2019-10-22 15:23 UTC link
Permission requests can no longer be made while in fullscreen mode

This is great news. What a huge security hole that has been.

lbotos 2019-10-22 15:29 UTC link
I recently switched to firefox to give it a try. Does anyone else 2x-3x their video playback and notice the audio distortion in FF on mac? I've tried to find some discussion or workarounds for it, but no dice. Hoping that maybe the renderer in this release might help a little.
aroman 2019-10-22 15:36 UTC link
> Lastly, Core Animation allows us to move rendered content around in the window cheaply. This is great for efficient scrolling. (Our current compositor does not yet make use of this capability, but future work in WebRender will take advantage of it.)

Oh I am so excited about this! Where can I follow along with this development?

antoineMoPa 2019-10-22 15:47 UTC link
My message to the team would be: Please bring back the shader editor in devtools.

In a previous release, we had access to live reloading shader editor, which was really useful in my case, developing real time WebGL apps. It was a truly nice developer feature.

freediver 2019-10-22 16:07 UTC link
I am not a Firefox user but know that matching Webkit performance on macOS is going to be very hard.

So just fired a test on my Macbook Air - Safari 13 vs Firefox 70.

Opened top 10 links from techmeme. Both windows in background.

Firefox 70: Energy use 30-200; CPU 20-25%; Threads 82

Safari 13: Energy use 0.1-5; CPU 2-5%; Threads 11

If this is to celebrate I can only imagine what the things looked like before this release. Save for Apple fiddling with the energy use numbers (VW style) this means that my battery is going to last 4-5x longer with Safari. Can anyone replicate this for the sake of argument?

Edit: uploaded screenshots https://imgur.com/a/4L64ShP

burtonator 2019-10-22 16:11 UTC link
Firefox + Mozilla are awesome. I still have a Mozilla 1.0 t-shirt from the first release party!

I've recently seen a ton of FF fans state that the reason they love Firefox is that it doesn't have ads or track you and preserves your privacy.

However, Firefox wouldn't exist without Google and (to a lesser extent, Google Chrome).

They make 94% of their revenue via bundling and distribution deals with companies like Google.

So to say that Firefox doesn't really have ads I think it is a bit disingenuous. They don't have ads directly but they benefit directly from the ecosystem.

Without Google's ad business Firefox wouldn't exist.

Not saying this to be rude or call you guys out. I think we need an honest discussion on this issue.

Across the industry, we see users just outright refusing to pay for products because they're accustomed to 'free' being the norm.

News, social media, browsers, etc.

If you charge for a news site the users will revolt and go somewhere else.

If Facebook tried to charge users they would revolt.

Same thing for browsers.

Yet a large percentage of these same users will get angry and yell that they're privacy is being sold.

I'd rather things be direct. I'd rather we live in a world where customers paid directly for the product and I was the customer (not the product).

ceronman 2019-10-22 16:58 UTC link
I recently tried Firefox again and I liked a lot. Only drawback for me at the moment is the lack of hardware video decoding on Linux. I hope it arrives soon.
Klonoar 2019-10-22 17:55 UTC link
Switching to CoreAnimation is very, very nice - however, this still doesn't feel quite at home on macOS because of a bug that's pretty old at this point.

Overflow/rubberband scrolling needs to be added here, because that is how scrolling is supposed to work on macOS. If you don't have it, you feel very alien. I'm not entirely sure why this isn't fixed after all these years, especially since Chrome managed to do it - it's not like an open source implementation doesn't exist at this point to crib the math from.

submeta 2019-10-22 18:57 UTC link
Love the new mission statement: `Firefox is tech that fights for your online privacy.`

Apple has demonstrated that privacy is a very effective value proposition. Maybe Apple should look into investing in Mozilla/Firefox.

kizer 2019-10-22 19:02 UTC link
Mozilla won't quit - I love it. We need a third browser engine in the game and that should be sufficient as I've determined arbitrarily. There should be an open source browser that's a little more amateur and "democratically developed" than the big ones. Although browsers are approaching OSs in terms of complexity (or already there). Tried switching back to FF a while back but was still not as smooth as Chrome. I'll give it another shot. Good job, Mozilla!
grantcarthew 2019-10-23 02:15 UTC link
doesnt_know 2019-10-23 06:12 UTC link
Links for the password manager, "Firefox Lockwise" go through adjust, which appears to be a tracking/analytics/marketing platform. This is both through their website and by clicking through the Firefox UI menu.

I guess it's harder to walk the walk yourself when the desires to track usage and analytics come from within your own teams.

Check the links yourself over at:

https://www.mozilla.org/en-GB/firefox/lockwise/

And built in to Firefox by going about:logins, the top right * menu and clicking Lockwise for Android or Lockwise for iPhone

You end up with redirect links like:

https://app.adjust.com/6tteyjo?redirect=

m4lvin 2019-10-22 14:33 UTC link
It seems there are add-ons for this :-)

https://github.com/kimsey0/FirefoxAutoDict

adfkbuvasdas 2019-10-22 14:34 UTC link
Game changer! Now from my POV Firefox is the best desktop browser, period. No caveats.
GhettoMaestro 2019-10-22 14:35 UTC link
The performance is what has kept me on Chrome on Mac. Going to re-install FF now and give it a whirl. Thanks for this info!
aashcan 2019-10-22 14:36 UTC link
There used to be the Dictionary Switcher addon, but doesn't work >v57. An alternative I found was https://addons.mozilla.org/en-GB/firefox/addon/automatic-spe...
ronjouch 2019-10-22 14:46 UTC link
Please vote and/or speak up (constructively, no "mee too" comments please) on https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=69687
nathancahill 2019-10-22 14:47 UTC link
This should be the headline feature. I've been following this bug for so long on Bugzilla. The energy improvement is really incredible.
taco_emoji 2019-10-22 14:52 UTC link
Couple other features I'd like: - Import from other formats (Keepass, or at least any format Keepass can export to) - Share items with someone else
re4ctor 2019-10-22 15:05 UTC link
mgbmtl 2019-10-22 15:09 UTC link
It does not allow notes, only login/password.

I use it to sync passwords with my phone. I like that I can use a fingerprint to unlock the file on my phone (instead of passphrase). I used to put silly passwords on sites I didn't care about (variants on a common password), but now I systematically generate a random password for all sites because there is no loss of convenience.

geraltofrivia 2019-10-22 15:14 UTC link
Agreed. I'm thinking of cancelling my Dashlane subscription and moving to this Password Manager now.

Firefox's Lockwise App (on android) leaves a lot demanding though.

pier25 2019-10-22 15:22 UTC link
Yes that's probably the most annoying thing in FF. Chrome does spell checking even when you mix multiple languages in the same sentence.
giancarlostoro 2019-10-22 15:22 UTC link
Weird, Chrome (specifically Electron) always gets confused when I speak English and Spanish all at once and Slack just starts to say everything I spell in English is wrong, it kinda annoys me. I don't think I have experienced this on Firefox.
chrischen 2019-10-22 15:29 UTC link
Battery life is my primary concern, and unless they release battery life benchmarks I’d be hard pressed to switch off of Safari.
padenot 2019-10-22 15:37 UTC link
Yes, we (the media team at Mozilla) know about this, and we're having a look.

The algorithm we use it not the best (and I think it's not the only cause of bad quality here), and we're investigating what to do.

https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1427267 is where we track this issue.

frereubu 2019-10-22 15:38 UTC link
Don't want to rain on your parade, but this is a long way from being generally available: https://caniuse.com/#search=text-decoration-thickness

11% coverage, and almost all of that is iOS Safari.

soulofmischief 2019-10-22 15:38 UTC link
Glad to have an alternative to Chrome!

Many would argue that Chrome is an alternative to Firefox, given that Firefox predates Chrome as the first real viable browser alternative.

robotstate 2019-10-22 15:52 UTC link
Then what happens when you're on a different browser?
jacurtis 2019-10-22 16:13 UTC link
> this means that my battery is going to last 4-5x longer with Safari

Well it might last 4-5x longer if you run safari in the background, since that is what you tested. But wouldn't the real test be running both browsers as the active window and comparing those results?

One thing that Safari is incredibly good at (and its' engineers are proud of) is the ability to reduce resource consumption for non-active tabs and windows to nearly zero. This is really good when running on battery because it is a shame to dedicate resources to things that aren't even visible on screen. But this could make the results far more dramatic through your test.

I would hypothesize that Safari still wins your performance test (if you were to re-test using them both as "active" windows), but probably not as dramatically as in the inactive window test.

mcrider 2019-10-22 16:23 UTC link
Me too -- This is a real quality of life improvement for developers that work with picky designers :)
rusk 2019-10-22 16:23 UTC link
> Without Google's ad business Firefox wouldn't exist

Really? My recollection of events 15 years ago is a little hazy, but wasnt FF a browser-only release of Mozilla, itself Netscape which has been around as long as time itself (~25 years?)

What are we talking about here? There was very definitely a push around 2003 to get FF adopted en masse, and I guess Google probably were a big factor in this ...

Bit of a stretch to say FF wouldn’t have existed otherwise though. There was very definitely some dissatisfaction across the board with IE dominance and its not hard to imagine something like FF being inevitable.

gwern 2019-10-22 16:25 UTC link
It'll be nice to simplify underline links tremendously once that becomes implemented in IE/Edge & Safari. The existing methods for avoiding underlines overlapping text descenders like Tufte-CSS's method (https://github.com/edwardtufte/tufte-css) are kinda crazy looking, and also cause the occasional bug with text highlighting.
staticassertion 2019-10-22 16:29 UTC link
> I've recently seen a ton of FF fans state that the reason they love Firefox is that it doesn't have ads or track you and preserves your privacy.

> However, Firefox wouldn't exist without Google and (to a lesser extent, Google Chrome).

These are unrelated issues, though. A connection, financial or otherwise, to Google, does not mean that users aren't getting a browser that prioritizes privacy.

johnchristopher 2019-10-22 16:29 UTC link
Oh, please. You make it sound like Mozilla is equivalent to Facebook. Is that a smear campaign ?

You can donate to the Mozilla foundation. Have you ? Have you convinced your company or your friends to do so ?

Because that's a better alternative than outright singling Mozilla out for their ties to Google. Which last time I checked didn't make the user the product of Google like Chrome or Android does.

bad_user 2019-10-22 16:47 UTC link
> I'd rather we live in a world where customers paid directly for the product and I was the customer (not the product).

Out of curiosity, what services and products are you paying for?

I'm willing to bet that a vast majority of HN users are still using a @gmail.com email address. And I'm actually in that super small minority that pays for services such as FastMail, Dropbox, Newsblur, 1Password, or YouTube (premium). I also donated to Mozilla among others.

---

The problem is that browsers should be part of the "commons", just like roads, since browsers are indespensible platforms in this day and age.

Are your taxes funding browsers? If no, then are you suggesting that only the privileged should have access to a good, modern browser?

---

Also products like Firefox are very unlike other products, because it's open source, both by license and by how it is developed. If Mozilla dies due to Google pulling the plug on their deal, Firefox is still open source and with enough resources somebody else can pick up its development.

To wit Thunderbird may still live under the Mozilla Foundation, but it is community driven, with donations from individuals being its primary source of funding. And it is moving along. Not as fast and it isn't as polished as its users would want, but it lives.

---

I'd rather use Mozilla's Firefox, instead of products with obscure VC-backed business models that just piggyback on top of Chromium and are thus in no way a threat to Chrome's monopoly.

willtim 2019-10-22 16:53 UTC link
IIRC Safari achieves this by suspending the processes in background tabs, which could be running inefficient JavaScript (polling for new ads etc). There's no cross-platform way to do this, but I think Mozilla absolutely need to try and find a way to address this. Web sites cannot be trusted to write efficient well-behaved JavaScript and so the burden of taming it falls upon the browser. There is probably some throttling going on, but clearly not enough. Running background JavaScript should be an opt-in permission, not the default.
BuckRogers 2019-10-22 16:53 UTC link
On Windows I've been testing the new MS Edge because I've noticed my laptop has significantly higher CPU usage running FF. The reduced battery life is one thing, a hot laptop is another. Currently the new Edge is not as well optimized as the original, but there's more to come on that front.

I've been using FF since it was in beta, never left but I'm starting to come around to the reality that native browsers are best optimized for the device. While there's no real native browser to leverage on desktop Linux, on macOS/Windows, native may be the best way to go for most people. This is how break down browsers to friends and family.

Google Chrome- optimized for Google's needs and profit margin.

Microsoft Edge- optimized for your device, if running Windows.

Apple Safari- optimized for your device, if running macOS.

Mozilla Firefox- optimized for the user. Certainly a noble goal, but I increasingly have a "mobile" goal and that trend isn't slowing for anyone.

Timothycquinn 2019-10-22 17:06 UTC link
Saw that too. What a wicked feature. Will make reverse engineering and debugging other peoples code much much easier!
pfranz 2019-10-22 17:15 UTC link
I just can't imagine Firefox will ever be performant as Safari. One is written for a single platform developed at the same company that develops the hardware and OS (I'm not trying to belittle the Safari team--it's kind of amazing what they do). The other is developed separately, must equally support at least 2 other OSes and has an expectation for supporting older setups.

My problem is that Safari won't work for me as a daily driver so it's not an option. It seems too aggressive in memory management and in reloading.

So I'm very happy to see Firefox improve performance over Firefox-v1.

ben0x539 2019-10-22 17:19 UTC link
Surely if your package manager installs firefox into /usr or whatever, it's not gonna be able to update itself either way, right?
jonnycomputer 2019-10-22 17:26 UTC link
With a previous update 1-2 years ago, the password manager seemed to lose the ability to force-create and edit new items, which is necessary if you are using it as a general purpose password manager, or for sites that stubbornly refused to play nice. I switched to LastPass, which worked out fairly well, with the family option, so that my spouse and I can share subsets of passwords with each other. But this FF update does look like they've fixed that issue.
Editorial Channel
What the content says
+0.60
Article 19 Freedom of Expression
High Advocacy Coverage
Editorial
+0.60
SETL
+0.24

Content extensively advocates for developer freedom, knowledge-sharing, and technical expression through detailed explanations of 16+ new Firefox capabilities, developer tools, and accessibility features. Editorial approach emphasizes open-source development culture and technical empowerment

+0.50
Article 26 Education
High Advocacy Practice
Editorial
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SETL
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Content explicitly advocates for technical education accessibility through multiple mechanisms: detailed explanations with concrete code examples, links to comprehensive documentation, promotion of YouTube educational channel, and newsletter signup. Editorial approach emphasizes making complex technical knowledge universally accessible

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Article 12 Privacy
Medium Framing Advocacy
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Content advocates for privacy-enhancing features, specifically secure password generation with Lockwise and Firefox Privacy Protection Report, framing these as beneficial advances for user security and control

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Article 27 Cultural Participation
Medium Framing Advocacy
Editorial
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SETL
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Content promotes participation in web development technical culture by presenting new JavaScript internationalization methods, CSS features, and performance improvements as cultural and scientific advances. Framing celebrates technical progress and invites community engagement

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Preamble Preamble

Content does not engage with preamble themes of dignity, freedom, equality, or justice

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Article 1 Freedom, Equality, Brotherhood

Content does not address equality or equal rights

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Article 2 Non-Discrimination

Content does not address discrimination or protected categories

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Article 3 Life, Liberty, Security

Content does not address life, liberty, or personal security

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Article 4 No Slavery

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Article 5 No Torture

Content does not address torture or cruel treatment

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Article 6 Legal Personhood

Content does not address right to recognition as a person

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Article 7 Equality Before Law

Content does not address equality before law

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Article 8 Right to Remedy

Content does not address right to legal remedy

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Article 9 No Arbitrary Detention

Content does not address freedom from arbitrary detention

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Article 10 Fair Hearing

Content does not address right to fair trial

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Article 11 Presumption of Innocence

Content does not address presumption of innocence

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Article 13 Freedom of Movement

Content does not address freedom of movement

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Article 14 Asylum

Content does not address right to asylum

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Article 15 Nationality

Content does not address right to nationality

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Article 16 Marriage & Family

Content does not address marriage and family rights

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Article 17 Property

Content does not address right to property

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Article 18 Freedom of Thought

Content does not address freedom of thought, conscience, or religion

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Article 20 Assembly & Association

Content does not address freedom of assembly or association

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Article 21 Political Participation

Content does not address political participation or public affairs

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Article 22 Social Security

Content does not address social security or welfare

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Article 23 Work & Equal Pay

Content does not address labor rights, employment, or fair compensation

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Article 24 Rest & Leisure

Content does not address right to rest and leisure

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Article 25 Standard of Living

Content does not address adequate standard of living, healthcare, food, or housing

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Article 28 Social & International Order

Content does not address international order or human rights framework

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Article 29 Duties to Community

Content does not explicitly address duties or responsibilities to community, though accessibility features implicitly reflect development ethics

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Article 30 No Destruction of Rights

Content does not address preservation of UDHR rights

Structural Channel
What the site does
Element Modifier Affects Note
Legal & Terms
Privacy +0.15
Article 12
Site implements Google Analytics and GTM tracking with UTM parameter removal utility, indicating awareness of privacy concerns but continued analytics deployment.
Terms of Service
Terms of service not observable in provided content.
Identity & Mission
Mission +0.20
Article 19 Article 27
Mozilla's stated mission around open web and developer empowerment aligns with knowledge-sharing and technical security education.
Editorial Code +0.05
Article 19
Technical blog format with clear author attribution and date stamps supports editorial transparency.
Ownership +0.10
Article 19
Mozilla Foundation ownership as non-profit organization supports commitment to public interest over profit-driven content.
Access & Distribution
Access Model +0.15
Article 26
Open access technical content published without paywall or registration barrier.
Ad/Tracking -0.10
Article 12
Google Analytics and GTM tracking present on page reduces privacy score despite Mozilla's privacy advocacy.
Accessibility +0.10
Article 2 Article 19
Standard WordPress accessibility CSS classes present (wp-block structure), indicating baseline accessibility standards.
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Article 19 Freedom of Expression
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Article published on open-access platform without paywall, login, or registration barrier; clear author attribution and professional presentation support freedom of information access

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Article 26 Education
High Advocacy Practice
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Site structure enables educational access through open publishing, multiple content formats without paywalls, clear learning progressions, and invitation to ongoing education through newsletter and video channels

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Article 27 Cultural Participation
Medium Framing Advocacy
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Blog structure facilitates technical culture participation by publishing feature documentation, enabling community feedback, and providing engagement pathways through YouTube and newsletter channels

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Preamble Preamble

No observable structural practice related to preamble principles

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Article 1 Freedom, Equality, Brotherhood

No observable structural practice related to equality

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Article 2 Non-Discrimination

No observable structural practice related to non-discrimination

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Article 3 Life, Liberty, Security

No observable structural practice related to personal security

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Article 4 No Slavery

No observable structural practice related to freedom from slavery

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Article 5 No Torture

No observable structural practice related to torture prevention

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Article 6 Legal Personhood

No observable structural practice related to legal personhood

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Article 7 Equality Before Law

No observable structural practice related to legal equality

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Article 8 Right to Remedy

No observable structural practice related to remedy access

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Article 9 No Arbitrary Detention

No observable structural practice related to detention

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Article 10 Fair Hearing

No observable structural practice related to due process

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Article 11 Presumption of Innocence

No observable structural practice related to innocence presumption

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Article 12 Privacy
Medium Framing Advocacy

Article structure itself does not demonstrate observable privacy practice; domain-level privacy and tracking signals addressed in DCP

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Article 13 Freedom of Movement

No observable structural practice related to freedom of movement

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Article 14 Asylum

No observable structural practice related to asylum rights

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Article 15 Nationality

No observable structural practice related to nationality

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Article 16 Marriage & Family

No observable structural practice related to family rights

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Article 17 Property

No observable structural practice related to property rights

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Article 18 Freedom of Thought

No observable structural practice related to conscience or belief freedom

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Article 20 Assembly & Association

No observable structural practice related to assembly or association

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Article 21 Political Participation

No observable structural practice related to political participation

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Article 22 Social Security

No observable structural practice related to social security

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Article 23 Work & Equal Pay

No observable structural practice related to labor rights

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Article 24 Rest & Leisure

No observable structural practice related to rest and leisure

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Article 25 Standard of Living

No observable structural practice related to adequate living standards

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Article 28 Social & International Order

No observable structural practice related to international human rights order

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Article 29 Duties to Community

No observable structural practice explicitly addressing community duties

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Article 30 No Destruction of Rights

No observable structural practice related to UDHR preservation

Supplementary Signals
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Epistemic Quality
How well-sourced and evidence-based is this content?
0.79 medium claims
Sources
0.8
Evidence
0.8
Uncertainty
0.8
Purpose
0.9
Propaganda Flags
No manipulative rhetoric detected
0 techniques detected
Emotional Tone
Emotional character: positive/negative, intensity, authority
hopeful
Valence
+0.7
Arousal
0.4
Dominance
0.6
Transparency
Does the content identify its author and disclose interests?
0.90
✓ Author
More signals: context, framing & audience
Solution Orientation
Does this content offer solutions or only describe problems?
0.88 solution oriented
Reader Agency
0.8
Stakeholder Voice
Whose perspectives are represented in this content?
0.45 2 perspectives
About: developersend_usersinstitution
Temporal Framing
Is this content looking backward, at the present, or forward?
present immediate
Geographic Scope
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global
Complexity
How accessible is this content to a general audience?
technical high jargon domain specific
Longitudinal · 5 evals
+1 0 −1 HN
Audit Trail 24 entries
2026-02-28 10:28 model_divergence Cross-model spread 0.57 exceeds threshold (5 models) - -
2026-02-28 10:28 eval Evaluated by claude-haiku-4-5-20251001: +0.45 (Moderate positive)
2026-02-28 01:41 dlq Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: Firefox 70 - -
2026-02-28 01:39 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-28 01:38 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-28 01:36 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-28 01:36 dlq_replay DLQ message 97629 replayed to LLAMA_QUEUE: Firefox 70 - -
2026-02-28 00:17 eval_success Light evaluated: Neutral (0.00) - -
2026-02-28 00:17 eval Evaluated by llama-3.3-70b-wai: 0.00 (Neutral)
2026-02-27 19:08 dlq Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: Firefox 70 - -
2026-02-27 19:05 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-27 19:04 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-27 19:03 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-27 19:03 dlq_auto_replay DLQ auto-replay: message 97593 re-enqueued - -
2026-02-27 16:19 eval_success Light evaluated: Neutral (0.00) - -
2026-02-27 16:19 eval Evaluated by llama-4-scout-wai: 0.00 (Neutral)
2026-02-27 14:56 eval_success Evaluated: Moderate positive (0.57) - -
2026-02-27 14:56 eval Evaluated by deepseek-v3.2: +0.57 (Moderate positive) 14,944 tokens
2026-02-27 14:56 rater_validation_warn Validation warnings for model deepseek-v3.2: 0W 6R - -
2026-02-27 13:02 dlq Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: Firefox 70 - -
2026-02-27 13:00 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-27 12:59 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-27 12:58 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-27 12:52 eval Evaluated by claude-haiku-4-5: +0.35 (Neutral)