Does Mozilla Have Vpn

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Jarrell Campbell

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Aug 5, 2024, 4:31:20 AM8/5/24
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Mostof us know Mozilla for their Firefox Web Browser and maybe for their email client called Thunderbird. But Mozilla has also released other services that complement Firefox really well. We already know Mozilla VPN powered by Mullad and Pocket to save web articles. And I personally miss FIrefox Send, and Firefox Notes that were discontinued. However, I still believe that Mozilla should bet everything on the Cloud and become profitable through a new subscription-based service called:

Mozilla should build a suite of applications similar to Google Worskpace of Microsoft 365, but powered by Open Source Projects, because we don't need to reinvent the wheel. Another company called Purism already has 3 of the services I'm mentioning below plus their own VPN Service. And they are using the same open source projects that I believe Mozilla could also take advantage of. Purism's service is called Librem One.


Mozilla is already a brand users trust thanks to their privacy and security policies. Therefore, many users will trust Mozilla with their precious data in a heartbeat. I am one of those because I can't wait to move away from Google.


The idea is nice but Mozilla Text would overlap the current Matrix server for example. A Nextcloud instance requires quite a lot of juice. If all is fully manage, they would probably tune down the capabilities of NextCloud too. I wonder what type of pricing this would require. Also which server/location would be available.


I would probably only pay for emails as I self host everything else on this list. I find myself switching email providers often trying them and all and the "Pro" offering is either very pricey while the free plan is very limiting, or the service is laggy hence I don't trust the "Pro" plan the provide offer.


The /e/ foundation is now offering cloud services powered by NextCloud, Email powered by RainLoop, and Document editing powered by OnlyOffice. This solution is very similar to my idea. I don't see why a bigger organization like Mozilla is not capable of pulling something like this.


I have used Mozilla from its very start. It obviously has staying power unlike the vast majority of tech companies. For something like email archiving and other storage I would trust Mozilla and pay for the service. My biggest day to day problem is not being able to sync email archives across platforms -- laptop and phone. Seems mozilla cloud would solve that problem.


I support web storage. I was thinking more along the lines of add-ons being able to sync data/files across multiple devices. Cheap paid cloud storage, like $2/500mb would be a great starting point for people who just want Consistency Across their Multiple Devices in regards to add-ons and possibly backing up pref/sets to the cloud. I also did see another idea of being able to send files across devices.


Murena Cloud actually has 3 of these services already in one: Nextcloud, email and Nextcloud Office (based on Collabora/LibreOffice online). I'm already subscribed to Relay and would switch my default email if Mozilla were to launch this especially as Murena Cloud supports Autocrypt.


Oh, I didn't know that - is this verified? I've been trying to migrate away from Gmail and the Google Drive for a while now and I almost subscribed to Murena or Mailfence earlier this month. Also, testing Vivaldi Webmail and Skiff but choosing a primary personal email needs careful consideration as it's typically used over a whole lifetime and you're actually advertising for the service every time you send an email or drive link.

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