this post was submitted on 14 Apr 2026
245 points (99.2% liked)

Cybersecurity

9856 readers
498 users here now

c/cybersecurity is a community centered on the cybersecurity and information security profession. You can come here to discuss news, post something interesting, or just chat with others.

THE RULES

Instance Rules

Community Rules

If you ask someone to hack your "friends" socials you're just going to get banned so don't do that.

Learn about hacking

Hack the Box

Try Hack Me

Pico Capture the flag

Other security-related communities !databreaches@lemmy.zip !netsec@lemmy.world !securitynews@infosec.pub !cybersecurity@infosec.pub !pulse_of_truth@infosec.pub

Notable mention to !cybersecuritymemes@lemmy.world

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] Feyd@programming.dev 3 points 1 week ago (1 children)
  1. You have to long click or open from the control menu to get link preview
  2. The link preview itself has a direct link to the settings page where you can disable it
  3. It's true that the link preview content that shows before you activate the AI summary is not AI. It is just showing the open graph content, same as any chat app or whatever
  4. If you like the open graph content, but don't want the AI summary, you can hit the chevron to fold the summary panel to window decoration size, and it stays folded for all future link previews even through reboots.
  5. The AI model doesn't download until first use

I don't like that link preview is how they spent their time, but the misinformation and subsequent overreaction to it is insane. I only even know this stuff or that it exists at all because I thought surely it wasn't as egregious as people were saying so I checked it out and boy was I right.

I'd be surprised if users that don't talk about firefox on the internet even know link previews exist.

[–] lime@feddit.nu 4 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (1 children)

all of that is correct and also basically what i said. the reason it became a big deal was because of accessibility. the definition of a "long press" is short enough that older users, who tend to hold the mouse button down for longer after a click, were suddenly seeing popup windows everywhere and, believing it to be an issue of the site they were on, assumed their popup blocker was broken. the timing was adjusted to one second in an update and also the long press shortcut was made optional.

when it was pointed out to mozilla that having a popup containing one big blue button in a popup with fancy graphics around it might also be harking back to the popup ads of yore, and that it might compel people to click on the only visible button on instinct, their head of firefox did an interview with pc world where he countered this with, and i'm paraphrasing here, "nuh-uh". this was in reference to an ama they did where several interaction experts weighed in with frankly pretty standard stuff: don't surprise the user, don't shove things in their face, don't draw attention needlessly.

for reference, here is the popup post-fixing:before they pushed an update the button didn't say "continue", it said "Summarize with AI ✨" and didn't have a "cancel" option.

[–] Feyd@programming.dev 0 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I'd be way more concerned about other things in that interview than nitpicking the language when firefox checks notes listened to feedback

[–] lime@feddit.nu 4 points 1 week ago

oh believe you me i am incredibly concerned about all of it. but they didn't listen to feedback, is the point. it's still there, it still pops up randomly due to no accessibility research, it's still blue.