195

They support Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, HuggingChat, and Mistral.

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[-] dukatos@lemm.ee 1 points 2 hours ago

And I still can't convince it to stop caching the images because it does not follows the RFC.

[-] Echolynx@lemmy.zip 5 points 8 hours ago

Sigh. I'm glad to have switched to LibreWolf.

[-] HouseWolf@lemm.ee 1 points 8 hours ago

I switched a while back before all the Ai and "privacy preserving" telemetry stuff.

Every update note I see for Firefox now just reinforces my decision.

[-] Treczoks@lemmy.world 8 points 10 hours ago

Luckily, it seems to be disabled by default. At the moment.

[-] EngineerGaming@feddit.nl 4 points 10 hours ago

I wonder if this can be removed at compile time, like Pocket.

[-] Mwa@lemm.ee 4 points 10 hours ago

Wasn't this there for a while, or just me.

[-] ByteMe@lemmy.world 2 points 9 hours ago

It is since version 128 I think

[-] Mwa@lemm.ee 2 points 7 hours ago

I think 130

[-] JokeDeity@lemm.ee 27 points 17 hours ago

Unpopular opinion, I think they're doing it right as well as it can be at least. It's completely optional and doesn't seem to be intrusive.

[-] Mwa@lemm.ee 4 points 10 hours ago
[-] potentiallynotfelix@lemmy.fish 4 points 17 hours ago

yeah its not google chrome level which i'm thankful about.

[-] JokeDeity@lemm.ee 14 points 17 hours ago

I'm way more pissed about restarting my PC after an update and having Copilot installed without my permission.

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[-] Scrollone@feddit.it 5 points 17 hours ago

Wow, great job Firefox. Thanks.

If I wanted unreliable bullshit like AI, I'd use Chrome.

[-] fibojoly@sh.itjust.works 22 points 1 day ago

Didn't want it in Opera, don't want it in Firefox. I mean they can keep trying and I'll just keep on ignoring this shit :/

[-] davi@startrek.website 1 points 18 hours ago

hopefully, it'll be possible to opt out somehow.

[-] ToxicWaste@lemm.ee 2 points 2 hours ago

as the screenshot shows, it is opt-in

[-] nu11@sh.itjust.works 38 points 1 day ago

I don't understand the hate. It's just a sidebar for the supported LLMs. Maybe I'm misunderstanding?

Yes, I would prefer Mozilla focus on the browser, but to me, this seems like it was done in an afternoon.

[-] PrefersAwkward@lemmy.world 6 points 13 hours ago

It seems like common cynicism. Mozilla add this feature, as not to yield major features to other browsers. Mozilla's lets you natively have lots of different AI solutions to pick from.

Not every feature is for everyone. Not every feature is done being improved on at release.

And in spite of popular opinions, organizations don't do just one thing and then do just the next thing and the thing after that. Organizations can and do focus on and prioritize many things at the same time.

And for people who are naysaying AI at every mention, it has a lot of great and fascinating uses, and if you think otherwise, you really should try them more. I've used it plenty for work and life. It's not going away, might as well do some nice things with it.

[-] Scrollone@feddit.it 7 points 18 hours ago

I want my browser to be a browser. I don't want Pocket, I don't want AI, I don't want bullshit. There are plugins for that.

[-] ToxicWaste@lemm.ee 1 points 2 hours ago

that's the great thing: you don't have to use it

[-] ilinamorato@lemmy.world 9 points 1 day ago

This happened ages ago, didn't it? Am I missing something new?

[-] 2kool4idkwhat@lemdro.id 7 points 18 hours ago

Yeah, it did. That feature has been there at least since when Mozilla enabled "Firefox labs" section in settings by default a few months ago, and maybe even earlier than that

[-] victorz@lemmy.world 6 points 18 hours ago
[-] ilinamorato@lemmy.world 4 points 18 hours ago

Well, this month in particular....

[-] victorz@lemmy.world 2 points 11 hours ago

True. ❤️

[-] potentiallynotfelix@lemmy.fish 1 points 18 hours ago

I only saw it now, maybe it happened before on a different version.

[-] davel@lemmy.ml 105 points 1 day ago
[-] celeste@lemmy.blahaj.zone 6 points 1 day ago

If they do it in a privacy-preseeving way, this could help them get back market share which will generally benefit an open internet.

[-] Scrollone@feddit.it 1 points 18 hours ago

Why would anybody want to have AI in their browser? It's a fucking browser.

[-] celeste@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 points 4 hours ago

Because browsers are the most useful tool on most computers. Ordinary People go on google/ask chatgpt for mundane questions. If their browser can do that they need 1 app less and it will be more convenient which is what especially non-tech savy people care about.

[-] potentiallynotfelix@lemmy.fish 1 points 18 hours ago

But it's gonna be very difficult when you've got Google and OpenAI up there.

[-] celeste@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 4 hours ago

It's an open source project, you can keep it in a box and people are able to check it.

[-] victorz@lemmy.world 1 points 18 hours ago

I really wish there was another way.

[-] fruitycoder@sh.itjust.works 6 points 1 day ago* (last edited 20 hours ago)

I will say, the Le Chat provider is pretty decent. You really can use it more natural language. "Rewrite it with a better rhyme scheme" "remove the last line" and it just got it.

Why no local option though? Why no anonmysing option?

Edit: There is a right click option which does make this officially actually useful for me now (summarize this!).

Other models do have RAG options and Mist real supports making agents with specified documentation too to at least fine tune too (not as good as full grounding though IMHO)

[-] fmstrat@lemmy.nowsci.com 12 points 1 day ago

I mean, if you're going to do it, where's the Ollama love?

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[-] ocassionallyaduck@lemmy.world 32 points 1 day ago

Thing is, for your average user with no GPU and whp never thinks about RAM, running a local LLM is intimidating. But it shouldn't be. Any system with an integrated GPU, and the more RAM the better, can run simple models locally.

The not so dirty secret is that ChatGPT 3 vs 4 isn't that big a difference, and neither are leaps and bounds ahead of the publically available models for about 99% of tasks. For that 1% people will ooh and aah over it, but 99% of use cases are only seeing marginal gains on 4o.

And the simplified models that run "only" 95% as well? They can use 90% fewer resources give pretty much identical answers outside of hyperspecific use cases.

Running a a "smol" model as some are called, gets you all the bang for none of the buck, and your data stays on your system and never leaves.

I've been yelling from the rooftops to some stupid corporate types that once the model is trained, it's trained. Unless you are training models yourself, there is no need for the massive AI clusters, just for the model. Run it local on your hardware at a fraction of the cost.

[-] sinceasdf@lemmy.world 2 points 14 hours ago

Idk I noticed pretty significant differences between models of various sizes. I mean there are lots of metrics on this

https://www.vellum.ai/llm-leaderboard

[-] LWD@lemm.ee 28 points 1 day ago

There's the tragedy with this new feature: they fast-tracked this past more popular requests, sticking it into Release Firefox.

But they only rushed the part that connects to third parties. There was also a "localhost" option which was originally alongside the Big Five corporate offerings, but Mozilla ultimately decided to bury that one inside of the about:config settings.

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[-] eleitl@lemm.ee 15 points 1 day ago

Thanks for nothing, Mozilla.

[-] Rozauhtuno@lemmy.blahaj.zone 24 points 1 day ago

They should raise the ceo's pay some more to celebrate.

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[-] Zementid@feddit.nl 9 points 1 day ago

Now add support for GPT4All and everyone is happy again.

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this post was submitted on 27 Nov 2024
195 points (93.7% liked)

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