Does "No Surprises" mean I won't find unwanted Firefox extensions pre-installed by Mozilla that are impossible to remove and only serve to reduce privacy by opening up new unwanted avenues to access my input and broadcast it over third party non-mozilla private networks? Shouldn't I at least be able to opt-out of a private video service running on a third party server that I have no terms of use or privacy policy covering?<p>"All changes must be ‘opt-in’, meaning the user must take non-default action to enact the change."<p>Right, just like I "opt-ed" in to Firefox Hello.<p>I can't even "opt out" of Firefox Hello!<p>"Uninstalling the add-on restores the user’s original settings if they were changed.<p>I wish. Just goes to show that they're pushing an uneven playing field where Firefox Extensions are auto-installed, can't be removed, and can break all the rules. But hey, at least everyone ELSE can't break all the rules.<p>Funny that they won't even apply this philosophy to their own products and services that they are forcing into user installations without an opt-in or opt-out.