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> It sounds like Mozilla just turned on the machine without consulting the human translators to see if the machine actually worked in a useful manner.

Yes. And someone should make a real apology. But learning what the machine did wrong is part of fixing a machine.



Yes, that's why you engage with the people doing the work first and run it on a staging environment to see what would be overwritten. You test until it's working well enough to enhance the effort done by the translators.


Well, in this era Im not entirely sure the quality aspect is even considered. CEO wants AI? Then he will get it, so that the next earnings call can be bombastic!

Saving zero dollars and making the product worse is not important, only that there doesn’t seem to be a browser monopoly is.


And the fact that they didn't strongly suggests that they knew.


And someone should make a real apology. Which I said.


An apology? Mozilla is incapable of taking responsibility. What they will do is blaming someone else, probably the translators.


Not all machines deserve to exist


What, you mean that US companies should ask their local branches before pushing changes in every countries? /s

This happens all the time, in every US company I know. It's as if the Americans where entirely oblivious to the fact that the rest of the world exists.




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