Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Firefox Businesses Media Mozilla Television The Internet Youtube Entertainment

Firefox Is Now Available On Amazon's Fire TV, Bringing YouTube Access With It (techradar.com) 49

Mozilla has announced that its Firefox web browser is now available on all Fire TV devices. While navigating web browsers on televisions isn't the most user-friendly experience, it could be the only way users can access YouTube. Earlier this month, Google pulled YouTube off the Fire TV and Echo Show since Amazon stopped selling several Google products. TechRadar reports: Though there's no explicit 'hey, this is a convenient workaround' section in Mozilla's announcement of the news, there is a section of the blog post which states that users can "go to YouTube and other sites directly from the Firefox for Fire TV home screen" and another which promises access to videos from "YouTube and other popular sites." While the companies are currently in talks to resolve their disagreements, Google's threat to pull YouTube access from the Fire TV line on January 1, 2018, is still hanging over Amazon. This threat is, however, now carries slightly less menace if Firefox browser access remains a workaround.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Firefox Is Now Available On Amazon's Fire TV, Bringing YouTube Access With It

Comments Filter:
  • Is Google not in a position to block the user agent string for Firefox for Fire TV? Net Neutrality has been repealed, any other rules in place to prevent this?
    • by Anonymous Coward

      That wouldn't stop addons that changed the user agent string.

    • by penix1 ( 722987 )

      They are acting like Firefox is the only workaround for getting to YouTube. There is, of course, Kodi which has a Kodi supported (in their repository) YouTube plugin. That is if YouTube is worth it these days. I haven't done anything on YouTube at all this year.

      • They are acting like Firefox is the only workaround for getting to YouTube. There is, of course, Kodi which has a Kodi supported (in their repository) YouTube plugin. That is if YouTube is worth it these days. I haven't done anything on YouTube at all this year.

        That was my thought. I wonder if FF on FTV even has a use-able 10 ft interface, on YouTube or in general.

    • Net Neutrality meant 'regulating ISPs under Title II'. It doesn't have anything to do with Google and Amazon blocking each others products on their platforms.

      In fact both Google and Amazon wanted ISPs - though of course not themselves - regulated under Title II.

    • Is Google not in a position to block the user agent string for Firefox for Fire TV? Net Neutrality has been repealed, any other rules in place to prevent this?

      Net Neutrality would not have prevented Google from doing that anyway. It only prevented ISPs from doing it, not content providers from blocking access. If it did something like that, Google, Facebook, Twitter, Amazon and the other big providers would never have supported it.

  • by mapkinase ( 958129 ) on Friday December 22, 2017 @06:56AM (#55788357) Homepage Journal

    ...but it will still be just an advertisement platform.

    Google pulled YouTube off the Fire TV and Echo Show since Amazon stopped selling several Google products.

    One day the whole concept of advertisement will be forbidden as transfats in food or ganja from the stores, that is as a vile violation of human health. In this case: mental health.

    Endless repetition (hundreds of times) of the same utterly useless crap to the ears of the same person should be declared a crime.

    I hope to live to that day when you can enjoy the site of the Flatiron building without flashy animated posters splattered over all corners of Times Square, so I can turn TV on and watch a full episode of Frasier in 20 minutes instead of one hour.

    Try turning off ADP and NoScript on your Firefox for a day. It's like if you put your glasses on in They Live. Myriad of annoying visual and audio pests coming at your face with persistent of steppe locusts. Incessant barrage of useless repetitions.

    It's your brain, people. Protect it at all costs, don't get it washed by Pepsi Cola concoctions.

  • and stop involving innocent consumers in their stupid school playground squabbles. There is no technical reason I should have to have a Google box, an Amazon box and an Apple box because the childish fucks are determined to shut each other out. It's wasteful (energy, material and money), it's unnecessary clutter and I don't even have that many HDMI sockets. There should be enforced standards.

    • That is capitalism. Each company has to protect their own interests. It is difficult to guarantee quality of a service you don't own. And allowing your competitor's service to run in an inferior manner on your device is a recipe for failure.
      • by Cloud K ( 125581 )

        That is indeed capitalism and why it needs some degree of government control to tame it (see also net neutrality)

    • If you think it's bad now, just wait until Disney gets their new streaming service and pulls all their content and their new Twenty First Century Fox subsidiary's content off of all the other services...

  • I have a Nexus Player and a Fire tablet and have tried almost every browser available on the platform. Recently the developer for Waterfox [waterfoxproject.org] started compiling to Android and since I use it on every other platform I can I gave it a try. Sure enough it was hands down the best experience on an Android based device I have had with a browser. And since it retains legacy plugin architecture most of your tried and true plugins should work. It is only compiled to 64 bit so you're out of luck if you're stuck on a 32 b
  • This is the same crap that google pulled on windows phone with its youtube app.

    Bottom line is these companies are jostling for position, and users are just fodder. Google has gone full microsoft!

On the eighth day, God created FORTRAN.

Working...