this post was submitted on 25 Apr 2025
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Thunderbird has their own finances and operates quite independent from Mozilla. They make more money than any other project under Mozilla's banner. Thunderbird is quite successful. And even if one day a problem occurs, one could still use a fork or switch to a different mail client. But I don't see any problem coming, unlike with Firefox in example.
Oh that's good to know ! Does this mean it doesn't have the same annoying opt-out "features" than Firefox ? Like the sponsored links, the "privacy preserving" ads, and so on ? Also you said you can switch to a different client if something happens, but doesn't Thunderbird use mbox which from what I understand is not portable to other clients ?
Thunderbird doesn't have the same annoying stuff of Firefox, as far as I know at least. However, there is no guarantee that Mozilla wouldn't force this on Thunderbird someday, even if Thunderbird operates mostly independent.
By switching to another client, I didn't mean you can takeover your offline accounts and data to another client. Just meaning you can switch, as your mail accounts are not bound to any mail client. Unlike something like Photoshop in example, that was what I meant. There is fork Betterbird, in case Thunderbird decides to go wild (we can't know that for sure). I did not look into it much, but I'm sure alternative forks that are compatible to the current Thunderbird profile (for import) will be available.
Cool if Thunderbird hasn't gotten the same treatment as Firefox, I hope that continues (though I wouldn't say I have much confidence in Mozilla not to muck that up too...) True you can switch, but you might lose all your previous emails if you have set up your client to use POP3 and it doesn't save your downloaded emails in a format that is portable π¬ ...which is exactly what I did when I tried Thunderbird a year ago π That's why this time I want to be less stupid and be sure I choose a client that supports MailDir