Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Celebrating 10 years of Mozilla


Today is a special day.




March 31, 1998 is the date that Mozilla was officially launched. It's
the date the first Mozilla code became publicly available under the
terms of an official open source license and a governing body for the
project — the Mozilla Organization — began its public work. It's always
been known in Mozilla parlance as "3/31." We'll be celebrating
Mozilla's 10 year anniversary throughout 2008. Today I want to look at
our first ten years, and a bit at the next ten years.



Ten years ago a radical idea took shape. The idea was that an open
source community could create choice and innovation in key Internet
technologies where large, commercial vendors could not. This idea took
shape as the Mozilla project.



Mozilla was not the first group to pursue this idea. GNU/Linux and
the BSD operating systems were already providing a very effective
alternative at the server-side operating system level; the Apache web
server was already proving that an open source solution could be
effective even in areas where the commercial players were actively
competing. Each of these gave strength to the idea that this new effort
could be successful.




At its inception, Mozilla was:



  • An open source codebase for the software we call the browser
  • A group of people to build and lead an open source development effort — the Mozilla Organization (also known as "mozilla.org")
  • A larger group of people committed to the idea — and the enormous work involved — in building a browser we all needed
  • An open source license granting everyone expansive rights to use the code for their own goals — the Mozilla Public License (which is now at version 1.1)
  • A website
  • A mascot (the orange T-rex, alternatively referred to as a lizard)


During the years since 3/31 we have taken that radical idea and
proved its power. We have broadened the idea beyond anything imagined
at our founding. And in the next ten years we'll continue to be radical
about building fundamental qualities such as openness, participation,
opportunity, choice and innovation into the basic infrastructure of the
Internet itself.




What have we accomplished?



  • Converted a closed, proprietary development process into a vibrant, transparent, open source project.
  • Grown into a massive global community, quite possibly the largest open source project in the world
  • Developed exceptional technology
  • Developed
    a set of long-term, vibrant projects — Firefox, Thunderbird, SeaMonkey,
    Camino, Bugzilla, Calendar — most, and possibly all of which have
    millions of users
  • Become the software provider of choice for over 170 million people
  • Proved that open source development can product great end user products
  • Brought the Internet to millions of people in their language
  • Moved the overall state of browser software forward dramatically
  • Become
    a technology platform others use to create products built on Mozilla
    technologies, and in some cases competitive with Mozilla products
  • Developed and implemented systems and community norms for a massive distribution of authority
  • Conducted all sorts of new activities in a transparent and participatory way, including product planning, marketing, public speaking, UI, and organizational decisions
  • Developed a reputation that people trust and feel they have helped create
  • Developed a sustainability model using market mechanisms to support a public benefit mission
  • Become a significant force in the development of Internet technology industry-wide
  • Developed a sophisticated organization that can — for example — service, update and respond to 170 million users
  • Built and operated giant open-source web applications — where the source code that runs the application *IS* open source and available to others;
  • Articulated our mission in broad, non-technical term
  • Encouraged others to try open, transparent and collaborative techniques in a broad range of activities
  • Created public assets of enormous value



That's a lot. And we're not done yet. The next ten years have
challenges and opportunities equal to those of our first decade. The
Internet is now interwoven into modern life, and it will certainly grow
to be more powerful. There's no guarantee that it will remain open or
enjoyable or safe. There's no guarantee that individuals will be able
to participate in creating or (for the general non-technical consumer)
effectively managing their experience. There's no guarantee that there
is an effective voice for individuals benefiting from the increased
power of the Internet .



Mozilla can and should fulfill this role. But not as a guarantor.
Mozilla is an opportunity for people to make this vision happen.
Mozilla is about opportunity and participation. Mozilla is people
getting involved, "doing" things, creating the Internet experience we
want to live with. We're not alone in doing this. Other open source and
free software projects play a strong role, as do other organizations
focused on participation, collaboration and openness in areas other
than software development.



We want the Internet to be an open environment, where it's easy to
innovate, and where individuals, small groups and newcomers all have
rich opportunities to create and lead. So, we'll build technologies and
products that make this happen. Mozilla offers each person who wants to
see this happen an opportunity to do something. Using Mozilla products
is an important step in its own right — every person using Mozilla
products makes our voice stronger. And there is much, much more that
any one of us can do.




What do we know is ahead of us?



  • Hundreds of millions of people relying on us for the quality of their Internet experience
  • Ensuring
    that the Open Web itself remains the developer platform of choice for
    new web applications; providing a compelling alternative to closed,
    proprietary development environments
  • Bringing openness and consumer choice to the mobile environment as we have to the desktop world
  • Handling data in a more transparent, participatory way for general consumers
  • Bringing openness, paticipation and opportunity to more — and as yet mostly undetermined — aspects of Internet life
  • Evolving the "browser" to support the new things we're doing on the Internet
  • Creating a new style of global organization: one where local involvement around the globe has increasing project-wide influence
  • Broadening
    the sustainability options for "hybrid" organizations — that is,
    organizations that support public benefit activities through market
    funding mechanisms as well as traditional fundraising



And these are just the things we can see today. Many of the best, most
exciting activities of the next ten years will seem to come from
nowhere. In reality they will come from people combining their own
ingenuity with Mozilla tools, techniques, technologies to build new,
wildly innovative aspects to life that none of us can imagine today.
And because the Mozilla Foundation is a non-profit organization we are
focused on creating the maximum possible public benefit rather than
revenue. We're able to provide maximum support to the broadest range of
activities. We don't limit how people can use our technology to
maximize revenue; we encourage people to challenge us.




Opportunity, Challenge, Excitement, Fun



During much of our first ten years people "knew" that our goal of
creating choice and innovation in the browser space was impossible.
From that perspective we have achieved the impossible. It certainly
wasn't easy, but here we are today in a radically different setting.



The challenges before us are great. But the opportunity is many
times larger. We have the ability to affect aspects of Internet
architecture and user experience. We have the organization, we have the
frameworks we need to work in, we have the voice. And most important of
all, we have the Mozilla community. The many thousands of people
actively engaged, and the multiples of that who support Mozilla goals
and offerings.




It's our world. Let's make it great. Here's to another 10 years!




- Mitchell Baker, Chief Lizard Wrangler

Source:
http://www.mozilla.org/