27 Jan 2026
Planet Mozilla
The Mozilla Blog: The State of Mozilla: Are you ready to choose your future?
We're at a fork in the road.
AI is here, and has started to define how we search, create, communicate - and how the web itself works. Some of you love AI, but want it to work better for yourselves and society. Some of you hate it, and don't want any of it.
We get it.
We also know, as Mozilla, that the future is being decided now. The big tech players are racing to lock down and control AI, and make sure it works on their terms, not ours.
The 2025/26 State of Mozilla, our annual report published today, is an invitation to a different future.
What you'll find in the State of Mozilla
This year's State of Mozilla goes beyond a traditional annual report. Inside, you'll find:
- Updates on what's new and coming with our core products, Firefox and Thunderbird.
- A look at how Mozilla is investing in open source AI and privacy preserving tech.A snapshot of our financials, and how we allocate resources to balance mission and money
- Stories from people across Mozilla and our community who are building tools, products, and movements that push AI in a better direction
- And, a commitment to giving you a choice in everything we do - including the option to say no to AI altogether.
All of this is guided by Mozilla's double bottom line: advancing the public interest and building sustainable businesses. This model lets us invest patiently, say no to extractive approaches, and support ecosystems that would otherwise struggle to exist.
A vision for what comes next
The future of AI - and the future of the web - is ours to define. We want to make that future to be one where humanity thrives, and technology helps out.
If you believe the future of AI should be human-centered, transparent, and open, we invite you to explore the report, share with your community and build that future with us.
Read the State of Mozilla 2025/26 here.
The post The State of Mozilla: Are you ready to choose your future? appeared first on The Mozilla Blog.
27 Jan 2026 5:05pm GMT
Firefox Tooling Announcements: Firefox Profiler Deployment (January 27, 2026)
The latest version of the Firefox Profiler is now live! Check out the full changelog below to see what's changed:
Highlights:


[arai-a] Implement dark mode (#5740)
- Huge thanks to :arai for working on this feature! It's currently not enabled by default but will be soon. It can be enabled through window.toggleDarkMode().
- [arai-a] Add a menu to copy the Marker Table as text (#5732)
- [arai-a] Do not apply sticky tooltip on double click (#5754)
- [Markus Stange] Allow seeing different assembly code for the same function (#5349)
- [fatadel] Align double-click behavior of stack chart with flame graph (#5782)
- [Markus Stange] Add a Focus Self transform (#5774)
- [Markus Stange] Fix "scroll to hotspot" functionality in the source view + assembly view (#5759)
- [Nazım Can Altınova] Enable the Turkish locale in production (#5786)
Other Changes:
- [arai-a] Put radio buttons into labels (#5738)
- [DaniPopes] Update comment for "unique-string" (#5741)
- [Karan Pradhan] Hide tooltip filter button in non-sticky tooltips and add hideFilterButton tests (#5718)
- [arai-a] Make the entire list item clickable for the "Full Range" (#5742)
- [Markus Stange] Remove SVG asset imports from profile-data.ts (#5747)
- [Markus Stange] Stop blindly extracting uint8array.buffer after calling compress() (#5753)
- [Markus Stange] Move symbol table demangling out of SymbolStore into SymbolProvider (#5746)
- [Markus Stange] In the assembly view state, refer to the current symbol by index (#5755)
- [arai-a] Skip the ChartCanvas redraw on the Viewport's internal default state usage (#5744)
- [Markus Stange] Keep the colorField markerSchema field when processing profiles in the gecko format (#5760)
- [Markus Stange] Fix light-mode colors (#5765)
- [Markus Stange] Tweak dark mode colours. (#5767)
- [Nazım Can Altınova] Enable some basic type-aware lints (#5775)
- [fatadel] Refine tree view a11y (#5779)
- [Markus Stange] Split gz.ts properly into node and browser variants (#5764)
- [Markus Stange] Simplify and optimize the computation of per-call-node line and address timings (#5770)
- [Nazım Can Altınova] Move the dark mode toggle to devtools console (#5783)
- [Nazım Can Altınova] Improve Chrome importer marker payload logic (#5717)
- [Nazım Can Altınova]
Sync: l10n → main (Jan 27, 2026) (#5785)
Big thanks to our amazing localizers for making this release possible:
- be: Mikalai Udodau
- de: Ger
- de: Michael Köhler
- el: Jim Spentzos
- en-CA: chutten
- en-CA: Saurabh
- en-GB: Ian Neal
- en-GB: Saurabh
- es-CL: ravmn
- fy-NL, nl: Fjoerfoks
- fr: Skywarp
- fr: Théo Chevalier
- fur: Fabio Tomat
- fy-NL: Fjoerfoks
- ia: Melo46
- it: Francesco Lodolo [:flod]
- nl: Fjoerfoks
- nl: Mark Heijl
- pt-BR: Marcelo Ghelman
- ru: berry
- ru: Valery Ledovskoy
- sv-SE: Andreas Pettersson
- tr: Grk
- zh-CN: Olvcpr423
- zh-CN: wxie
- zh-TW: Pin-guang Chen
Find out more about the Firefox Profiler on profiler.firefox.com! If you have any questions, join the discussion on our Matrix channel!
1 post - 1 participant
27 Jan 2026 4:53pm GMT
26 Jan 2026
Planet Mozilla
The Mozilla Blog: Who will pioneer the next web?

Who will build the next version of the web? Mozilla wants to make it more likely that it's you. We are committing time and resources to bring experienced builders into Mozilla for a short, programmed period, to work with our New Products leaders to build tools and products for the next version of the web.
It's a new program called Mozilla Pioneers, and applications open today - closing Monday, Feb. 16, 2026.
A different program from a different kind of company
Our mission at Mozilla is to ensure the internet is a global public resource, open and accessible to all. We know that there are a lot of gifted, experienced and thoughtful technologists, designers, and builders who care as deeply about the internet as we do - but seek a different environment to explore what's possible than what they might find across the rest of the tech industry.
This is the gap Mozilla Pioneers intends to fill.
Pioneers is intentionally structured to make it possible for those who don't typically get the opportunity to create new products to participate. The program is paid, flexible (i.e. you can do it part-time if needed), and bounded. We're not asking you to gamble your livelihood in order to explore how we can improve the internet.
This matters to me
My own career advanced the most dramatically in moments when change was piling on top of change and most people couldn't grasp the compounding effects of these shifts. That's why I stepped up to start an independent blogging company back in 2002 (Gizmodo) and again in 2004 (Engadget).
It's also why, a lifetime later, I joined Mozilla to lead New Products, where I've had the good fortune of supporting the development of meaningful new Mozilla tools like Solo, Tabstack, 0DIN, and an enterprise version of Firefox.
Changing the game
We've designed Pioneers to make space for technologists - professionals comfortable working across code, product, and systems - to collaborate with Mozilla on foundational ideas for AI and the web in a way that reflects these shared values.
We're looking for people to work with; this is not a contest for ideas, and you don't apply with a pitch deck. Our vision:
- Pioneers are paid. Participants receive compensation for their time and work.
- It's flexible, designed so participants can be in the program and continue to work on existing commitments. You don't have to put your life on hold.
- It's hands-on. Builders work closely with Mozilla leaders to prototype and pressure-test concepts.
- It's bounded. The program is time-limited and focused, with clear expectations on both sides.
- It's real. Some ideas will move forward inside Mozilla. Some will not - and they'll still be valuable. If it makes sense, there will be an opportunity for you to join Mozilla full-time to bring your concept to market.
- Applications are open Monday, Jan. 26 and close Monday, Feb. 16, 2026.
Pioneers isn't an accelerator, and it isn't a traditional residency. It's a way to explore foundational ideas for AI and the web in a high-trust environment, with the possibility of continuing that work at Mozilla.
If this sounds like the kind of work you want to do, we want to hear from you. Hopefully, by reading to the end of this post, you're either thinking of applying yourself - or know someone who should. I encourage you to check out (and share) Mozilla Pioneers, thanks!
The post Who will pioneer the next web? appeared first on The Mozilla Blog.
26 Jan 2026 7:14pm GMT