21 Apr 2026

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Mozilla Performance Blog: Telemetry Alerting Beta Announcement

We're happy to announce that the Telemetry Alerting beta is now open to everyone!

Monitoring for changes in telemetry probes that you own can be difficult to do on a regular and continuous basis. With telemetry alerting, that changes today! You can now quickly set up your timing distribution probes for automated monitoring on Windows with notifications through email or a Bugzilla bug.

To get started, if you only need email alerts, simply add monitor: True to the metadata section of your probe (example).

Example of an email alert.

If you would prefer to receive Bugzilla bugs when a change is detected, set the monitor field like so (example):

monitor:
alert: True
lower_is_better: True/False # Optional
bugzilla_notification_emails:
- <YOUR-BUGZILLA-EMAIL-HERE>

Example of an alert bug.

More information about telemetry alerting, and how to set up a probe can be found here in the documentation. There's also a dashboard that can show you all of the existing telemetry alerts along with some detection information. For now, we only support change detection on Windows for `timing_distribution` probes (see here for other desktop platforms, and android).

Please note that this is an open beta and we are actively looking for feedback on this system. If you hit any issues, or have any suggestions feel free to file a bug in the Testing :: Performance component or reach out to us in either #perf-help on Slack or in #perftest on Matrix.

Special thanks to Eduardo Filho for his support on the telemetry probe side, to Bas Schouten for his guidance and work on the CDF Squared detection technique, and to Andrej Glavic and Beatrice Acasandrei for their help in reviewing the Treeherder changes.

For a more detailed look at how this works, see this blog post.

21 Apr 2026 7:58pm GMT

The Mozilla Blog: What’s new in Firefox mobile: Less clutter, more control and a free built-in VPN

Mobile browsing hasn't kept up with how people actually use their phones.

Right now, even basic tasks can feel harder than they should. Finding what you need can mean scrolling through ads and filler content, keeping track of too many tabs, or thinking twice about how private your connection is.

A mobile browser should do more - and we're raising the bar. Firefox is rolling out a set of updates that build on our most popular desktop features and adapt them for how you browse on-the-go. Here's what's out now, and what's coming next.

Get the key points with Shake to Summarize

When you're following a recipe, reading a product review, or deciding whether a long article is worth your time, getting to the useful part can take longer than it should.

With Shake to Summarize, you can shake or tap your phone to generate a quick summary of the page. Currently available for iOS users in English, we're expanding availability to all iOS users in German, French, Spanish, Portuguese and Italian starting with Firefox 150 on April 21. We'll also soon be making Shake to Summarize available to Android users in English, so they too can get to the key points of any article in seconds.

Take control of how AI shows up

AI features are becoming a more common part of browsers - but not everyone wants the same experience. Firefox gives you a say in how they're used. With AI Controls, you can turn AI features off entirely, enable only the ones you want, or adjust things over time. Rolling out on Android and iOS beginning May 21.

Stay protected with a free, built-in VPN

Firefox's free built-in VPN covers up to 50 gigabytes of your browsing in Firefox each month, across desktop and mobile devices. It adds a layer of protection to your browsing activity by masking your IP address - especially useful when you're on public Wi-Fi. Unlike many "free VPNs" that rely on ads or selling user data to generate revenue, Firefox is built with a different model: no selling your browsing data, no injecting ads into your traffic. Instead, we offer a limited amount of browser-level protection for free, alongside Mozilla VPN, our paid, unlimited, full-device VPN service. Rolling out on Android soon.

Keep your tabs organized with Tab Groups

Tab Groups have been among the most-requested mobile features from our Mozilla community, and they're coming on mobile soon. You'll be able to group related tabs to stay organized, whether you're comparing restaurants, planning a trip or saving articles to read later.

We're also building toward smart groupings, where Firefox can automatically suggest tab groups for you. Rolling out on Android soon.

More updates, built around how you browse on mobile

Your phone comes with a browser. That doesn't mean it has to stay your default

"Firefox exists to give people a better way to experience the web, and that has to be just as true on mobile as it is on desktop," said Ajit Varma, head of Firefox. "For many people, their phone is their primary way of getting online, and they deserve a browser that's fast, intuitive and built around their needs. That's why we're investing in mobile more than ever before. We're building for the millions of people who choose Firefox every day, and giving even more people a reason to do the same."

Firefox is building a mobile experience designed around how people browse - with tools that help you move faster, stay organized and stay in control.

These updates begin rolling out in April with more on the way.

Take Firefox with you

Download Firefox mobile

The post What's new in Firefox mobile: Less clutter, more control and a free built-in VPN appeared first on The Mozilla Blog.

21 Apr 2026 7:36pm GMT

The Mozilla Blog: The zero-days are numbered

Multiple white cursor arrows scattered across a bright orange background.

Since February, the Firefox team has been working around the clock using frontier AI models to find and fix latent security vulnerabilities in the browser. We wrote previously about our collaboration with Anthropic to scan Firefox with Opus 4.6, which led to fixes for 22 security-sensitive bugs in Firefox 148.

As part of our continued collaboration with Anthropic, we had the opportunity to apply an early version of Claude Mythos Preview to Firefox. This week's release of Firefox 150 includes fixes for 271 vulnerabilities identified during this initial evaluation.

As these capabilities reach the hands of more defenders, many other teams are now experiencing the same vertigo we did when the findings first came into focus. For a hardened target, just one such bug would have been red-alert in 2025, and so many at once makes you stop to wonder whether it's even possible to keep up.

Our experience is a hopeful one for teams who shake off the vertigo and get to work. You may need to reprioritize everything else to bring relentless and single-minded focus to the task, but there is light at the end of the tunnel. We are extremely proud of how our team rose to meet this challenge, and others will too. Our work isn't finished, but we've turned the corner and can glimpse a future much better than just keeping up. Defenders finally have a chance to win, decisively.

Until now, the industry has largely fought security to a draw. Vendors of critical internet-exposed software like Firefox take security extremely seriously and have teams of people who get out of bed every morning thinking about how to keep users safe. Nevertheless, we've all long quietly acknowledged that bringing exploits to zero was an unrealistic goal. Instead, we aimed to make them so expensive that only actors with functionally unlimited budgets can afford them, and that the cost of burning such an expensive asset disincentivizes those actors against casual use.

This is because security to date has been offensively-dominant: the attack surface isn't infinite, but it's large enough to be difficult to defend comprehensively with the tools we've had available. This gives attackers an asymmetric advantage, since they only need to find one chink in the armor.

We use defense-in-depth to apply multiple layers of overlapping defenses, but no layer is bulletproof. Firefox runs each website in a separate process sandbox, but attackers try to combine bugs in the rendering code with bugs in the sandbox to escape to a more privileged context. We've led the industry in building and adopting Rust, but we still can't afford to stop everything to rewrite decades of C++ code, especially since Rust only mitigates certain (very common) classes of vulnerabilities.

We pair defense-in-depth engineering with an internal red team tasked with staying on the leading edge of automated analysis techniques. Until recently, these have largely been dynamic analysis techniques like fuzzing. Fuzzing is quite fruitful in practice, but some parts of the code are harder to fuzz than others, leading to uneven coverage.

Elite security researchers find bugs that fuzzers can't largely by reasoning through the source code. This is effective, but time-consuming and bottlenecked on scarce human expertise. Computers were completely incapable of doing this a few months ago, and now they excel at it. We have many years of experience picking apart the work of the world's best security researchers, and Mythos Preview is every bit as capable. So far we've found no category or complexity of vulnerability that humans can find that this model can't.

This can feel terrifying in the immediate term, but it's ultimately great news for defenders. A gap between machine-discoverable and human-discoverable bugs favors the attacker, who can concentrate many months of costly human effort to find a single bug. Closing this gap erodes the attacker's long-term advantage by making all discoveries cheap.

Encouragingly, we also haven't seen any bugs that couldn't have been found by an elite human researcher. Some commentators predict that future AI models will unearth entirely new forms of vulnerabilities that defy our current comprehension, but we don't think so. Software like Firefox is designed in a modular way for humans to be able to reason about its correctness. It is complex, but not arbitrarily complex1.

The defects are finite, and we are entering a world where we can finally find them all.


1 There's a risk that codebases begin to surpass human comprehension as a result of more AI in the development process, scaling bug complexity along with (or perhaps faster than) discovery capability. Human-comprehensibility is an essential property to maintain, especially in critical software like browsers and operating systems.

The post The zero-days are numbered appeared first on The Mozilla Blog.

21 Apr 2026 6:29pm GMT