I'd like to think the campaign was tested with the target demographic and
it was received positively, otherwise it would have gotten massively bad
feedback at launch.

I'm not saying it's not right to feel offended by this (it's your right),
but what I'm having trouble is that it boils down to your interpretation of
FoxYeah.

Because at face value, there's nothing offensive about it from my
perspective.


On Friday, June 12, 2015, R Kent James <k...@caspia.com> wrote:

> On 6/12/2015 10:40 AM, f1...@pobox.com wrote:
>
>> Actually, the rest of your comment was snipped above to support Kent's
>> argument, where you state:
>>
>> "If we changed the campaign now then we'd get a backlash from users who
>> oppose censorship."
>>
>
> I'm not suggesting that the campaign be changed. I am just noting that I
> am one of a class of people who find the campaign objectionable, in the
> hope that somehow Firefox marketing in the future will figure out ways to
> be cool without having to be offensive to some class of people.
>
> :rkent
> _______________________________________________
> governance mailing list
> governance@lists.mozilla.org
> https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/governance
>


-- 
*Regnard Raquedan, MBA, MSc.*
http://weboplex.com
@regnard <https://twitter.com/regnard>
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