You're being silly about it, but this is the core of anti-trust. You can't enter two different markets with two products and make sure they work better with each other than with any other product in the opposite market.

Or rather, you can, but it's illegal and the government is meant to come after you. Of course, the government hasn't been enforcing this for decades, ever since it was bought by companies that do this.


On 06/02/2026 16:04, Tom Beecher via NANOG wrote:
I can't help but notice that Chrome works. It's your _competitor_
Firefox that you don't seem to like.

A company's product sends more signals back that can streamline usage of
the same company's services?  What's next? Dogs and cats living together..
mass hysteria!!

On Thu, Feb 5, 2026 at 12:07 PM William Herrin via NANOG <
[email protected]> wrote:

I'm at SEATAC airport trying to access www.google.com via the public
wifi with Firefox. Apparently you really don't like that because it's
stuck in a Recaptcha loop displaying captcha after captcha after
captcha.

I can't help but notice that Chrome works. It's your _competitor_
Firefox that you don't seem to like.

IP address: 198.134.98.50
Time: 2026-02-05T20:03:35Z
URL: https://www.google.com/

FIx it, eh?

Regards,
Bill Herrin
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