They have acknowledged the defect and are working on a fix. While this is a severe impact, I am still with Firefox. The are enough alternative browsers to tide over the problem for now. The fact that alternatives exist is the reason why we should support projects like Firefox.
that's kinda the problem. there's plenty of reasons to be "with" firefox still, but you shouldn't need reasons other than it's the best browser. when it starts requiring loyalty to be a user, that's a big problem.
For me, it is the best browser. Yes, this is a big fuck up, but it's not like this has caused me material harm. It's easy for me to switch over to Chrome until this is fixed, and I doubt the same mistake will be repeated in Mozilla.
I expect perfection from plane and car manufacturers, and I pay for that. My browser, I can live with an occasional hiccup.
Just curious, should we expect that the fix (issuing a new signing cert and re-signing all the addons and whatnot) will result in the addons being automatically updated and re-enabled? They certainly seem to have streamlined disabling the addons, I wonder if it is equally simple from a users perspective to bring them back. Also now wondering just how hard their network/CDN is going to get slammed when those new re-signed addons go live and every user automatically redownloads them.