Mozilla itself deserves to shoulder at least as much of the blame due to a number of decisions that range from mediocre to downright terrible. And I'm not even talking about what happened with Brendan. I'm talking about the organization's downturn during the years that directly correspond with the tenure of people like Gary "JavaScript rendering engine" Kovacs and the years that saw Sullivan at the height of his influence.
The engineers aren't blameless either, having allowed themselves and the engineering culture to become the target of whatever neutering that did occur. "But I mean, these are business people; this kind of stuff is what they should know, right?" Sure, right. Totally let 'em go ahead and pursue those useless fucking partnerships at the costs they're coming with. After all, that's what real businesses look like.
What happened with Brendan may be very relevant. See my post further up in this thread.
Brendan did not like what the W3C was doing with DRM and was quite vocal about it. His prop 8 donation was public knowledge for years and nobody had a problem with it... but then suddenly the board, the employees and the community were outraged.
As soon as he was forced out the other execs at Mozilla announced they would be implementing DRM and EME. Coincidence?
You forget that another significant event happened at the time; he was nominated for CEO. That puts a person under a lot of scrutiny in the first place. I would say that it was indeed a coincidence.
Mozilla itself deserves to shoulder at least as much of the blame due to a number of decisions that range from mediocre to downright terrible. And I'm not even talking about what happened with Brendan. I'm talking about the organization's downturn during the years that directly correspond with the tenure of people like Gary "JavaScript rendering engine" Kovacs and the years that saw Sullivan at the height of his influence.
The engineers aren't blameless either, having allowed themselves and the engineering culture to become the target of whatever neutering that did occur. "But I mean, these are business people; this kind of stuff is what they should know, right?" Sure, right. Totally let 'em go ahead and pursue those useless fucking partnerships at the costs they're coming with. After all, that's what real businesses look like.