This isn't even the dumbest idea of the last 90 seconds. Somewhere out there a guy is getting a tattoo with the name of a girl he met in the last five hours while coked out if his mind. Compared to getting rid of that, extracting an RFID implant will be a minor inconvenience.
Having the product stuck on the page makes it appear valuable. (Inflating user counts, familiarizing the public with the brand.)
When the product appears valuable, they can sell more of it (primarily to investors).
They have to give the product away to sell it to a few gullible people.
The fact that there's enough dumb money floating around to make it a worthwhile scam is a whole problem bigger still.
People thinking of this stuff as a "magic rock that thinks" is exactly the problem. And the main people conceiving of it that way are the ones trying to jam it down everyone's throat.
As I already said in the previous post:
"MacOS mostly doesn't really even use ~/.config, because, well, "Apple".
We don't know if Mozilla will do that on MacOS, which does not follow all Unix conventions. Especially desktop ones, of which this is.
>"Linux" appears ZERO times in the specification."
And yet, 99% of who this change will affect will likely be Linux users. MacOS mostly doesn't really even use ~/.config, because, well, "Apple".
>"This is a specification for UNIX. Linux copied from UNIX but is not UNIX."
If it quacks like a duck and looks like a duck, it is probably a duck. Linux is Unix, in all ways that matter to anyone now (and for a long time before now). Worrying about exact Linux vs Unix vs UNIX vs Unix-like vs BSD vs POSIX is kinda no longer relevant.
>"Apps should keep their files in their own directories. Spreading them across a 1000 different directories makes no sense and just make uninstall a hassle"
It will still be in its own directory. Just in ~/.config/mozilla instead of ~/.mozilla
For example, LibreOffice stores its settings in ~/.config/libreoffice, GIMP is in ~/.config/GIMP, Thunar is in ~/.config/Thunar, VLC is in ~/.config/vlc, etc...
>"To date Firefox has just positioned all files under ~/.mozilla rather than the likes of ~/.config and ~/.local/share.
That is not technically correct. They have been using ~/.cache correctly for a very long time. So it is not *all* files. But it is true the other files have been in ~/.mozilla. I manage an ACTUAL multiuser system (something you rarely see today; yes, hundreds of different users each often running Firefox on that one machine), and even I don't care much that it is ~/.mozilla instead of ~/.config/.mozilla, but I will have to adjust a lot of scripts.
Never trust anyone who says money is no object.