Ian G wrote:

> This is what we are getting at.  Real people have
> real risks.  Geeks fantasize about being the target
> of NSA surveillance, but that's not the Mozilla
> target audience.

The biggest issue I have with some of the suggestions for improvement is
are they really an improvement worthy of annoying the crap out of users,
after all if a browser becomes too annoying and I can't switch the damn
thing off I'll simply start using a less annoying browser (which to an
end user could start pushing them back to MS IE)

Given that I'm not a typical user, I doubt I'm alone in my thinking here...

-- 

Best regards,
 Duane

http://www.cacert.org - Free Security Certificates
http://www.nodedb.com - Think globally, network locally
http://www.sydneywireless.com - Telecommunications Freedom
http://happysnapper.com.au - Sell your photos over the net!
http://e164.org - Using Enum.164 to interconnect asterisk servers

"In the long run the pessimist may be proved right,
    but the optimist has a better time on the trip."
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