Comment by DangerousPie

Comment by DangerousPie 3 days ago

24 replies

How are you expecting to run an entity with developers, support, and operations without any leadership?

I don't know if you have ever worked in a larger team that lacked someone to make decisions, take responsibility and set a strategy, but in my experience that is almost always a disaster.

os2warpman 3 days ago

I'm worked on many larger teams and leadership is independent of compensation.

The fact that "high performance leaders" need to make tens of millions of dollars is one of the greatest lies being told in the modern age.

Right now my chief in the fire company where I volunteer makes the same amount of money I do: $0.00. He is the greatest leader I have ever personally met, and I've been around for a while.

When I was in the Army, my company commander (a Captain) made ~4x what the newest private did. The highest-paid officer makes ~9x.

There are government senior executives and university professors running labs with budgets and teams that make Mozilla look like a lemonade stand for practically nothing.

Mozilla should ask the Linux Foundation what their budget is, what their leadership structure is, and do that.

Mozilla, no matter what they say or think or try, is and will always be a web browser developer. A web browser. Anything else is a side project, a hobby. A distraction. Every single molecule of fuel used by their brains while at work and every single microwatt of power used by their infrastructure should be wholly and aggressively dedicated to building the tools and organization needed to create the best web browser possible.

Bloated payrolls are tolerable if the decisions made are wise, responsibility is taken, and strategies exist and make sense.

Mozilla seems to have none of these.

But man they're spending a shit-ton on "AI"!

homebrewer 3 days ago

Three examples off the top of my head — PostgreSQL, FreeBSD, and Debian — are doing just fine without someone "taking responsibility" (when have Mozilla's CEO ever done that?).

Debian has an elected leader that is not paid and has pretty limited authority overall.

There's also the Linux kernel, with Linus doing both managerial and technical work, running circles around Mozilla's leadership in both. He makes just a few millions per year, less than Baker did even two years ago AFAIK.

  • DangerousPie 3 days ago

    PostgreSQL is just a community of volunteers as far as I'm aware, not full-time developers employed by the project.

    FreeBSD seems to have three paid directors: https://freebsdfoundation.org/about-us/our-team/

    Debian has a leader and also seems to be more a volunteer organisation than a full company: https://www.debian.org/intro/organization

    • walls 3 days ago

      All of the people on Postgres, FreeBSD, and Debian combined make a tiny fraction of what the Mozilla CEO does.

      • AJMaxwell 3 days ago

        Like what?

        • a3w 3 days ago

          I agree that probably the three mentioned projects don't total a 6 million USD budget, which is the CEO salary at Mozilla, but is only close to it.

  • rs186 3 days ago

    I think all of these projects have contributors who are getting paid at other companies for the work, notably Linux. Not quite so for Firefox. I mean, tell me where does Linus get his income? You think that can be fully replicated for Firefox?

sltr 3 days ago

They wrote "pad the CEO salary", not "support any leadership"

Compare to Torvalds. You may or may not like his leadership, but nobody feels sour about his salary.

reidrac 3 days ago

It can be done; an example is Igalia: https://www.igalia.com/jobs/

> We are a worker-owned, employee-run company with more than 20 years of experience building open source software in a wide range of exciting fields.

If there's enough money to go to the developers actively working on a product to make it sustainable, I think a lot of people would get on board with that and would pay for FF.

  • rs186 3 days ago

    > If there's enough money to go to the developers actively working on a product to make it sustainable

    That's a big if. AFAIK most open source project developers don't get remotely enough donations to support them working on it full-time. The ones that do are the exception, not the norm.

  • simsla 3 days ago

    I've been in organisations with great developers but no leadership. It's a shit show.

ho_schi 3 days ago

Leadership doesn’t mean earning more money.

I’m fine with twice the amount of a developer. Taking into account responsibility, public involvement and special clothing. Travel costs and so on are separate. The developers are doing the hard work.

There is not “team” if a MBA or lawyer gets 38 times the wage of an actual person doing the work.

  • vladms 3 days ago

    Worth thinking of it also "the other way". As long as some people (developers) accept an MBA above them getting 38x, without adding much value, this will happen.

    I don't personally like it (so generally did not allow to happen to me), but if some people feel "safer" getting lower pay (less chance of getting fired, easier to get re-hired as there are more low paid positions than high paid positions), the natural result is that it will happen.

    My experience is that both high and low paid positions are not as "safe" as people think they are (seen multiple changing in various organizations types), so people should care more about finding a reasonable organization.

IshKebab 3 days ago

I think you need a CEO, you just don't need a CEO that is paid $7m/year. That's ludicrous. What amazing decisions have they been making that were worth that amount? Have they really contributed more than a team of 70 developers could?

There are plenty of competent people that could be CEO for far less, like $200k/year.

  • noisy_boy 3 days ago

    It doesn't even have to be that. Take that and bump it 5 times like a million dollars. Throw in more cash if they can increase Firefox's market share. Have clauses to penalize anything about opt-out telemetry or anti-privacy features. I'm happy to add more carrots as well as more sticks.

    All said and done, that will still be way more reasonable than that ludicrous salary.

  • EasyMark 3 days ago

    I would be fine with $6 million if it was making at least that much more in revenue because of the CEO, but I highly suspect that it is not. I think $600K would be PLENTY and would pull in talented execs and managers.

gtsop 3 days ago

> don't know if you have ever worked in a larger team that lacked someone to make decisions, take responsibility and set a strategy

I had once. The ultra micro-managing boss went to surgery and was off for two months. The whole company happily cruised along, numbers kept going up, his toxic pressure was absent, people kept working and making things.

I don't know how it would go for long term, but these were some of the best months.

rc_mob 3 days ago

If the CEO changes his salary to 200k then fine I have no problem with that. CEOs are overpaid relative to skill and that does not sit well with my sense of generosity.

lucideer 2 days ago

Leaving aside the (valid) sibling commenters here pointing out that it can be done well, but you're making a strawman argument - the gp never said anything about eliminating managers or organisational structure.

They specifically targetted two things:

1. directing funding towards Firefox development. Mozilla have been criticised for spending large portions of their income on non-Firefox endeavours while not publishing breakdowns of Firefox-specific spending in their annual reports

2. The CEO's salary: the commenter said nothing about not wanting the CEO position to exist, merely a desire for the funding to the Foundation to not be excessively funnelled into salary increases while the company's resources contract. Which seems reasonable.

stefan_ 3 days ago

It's bizarre. In Japan, the custom is to revere your elders, in the US its apparently whoever is titled "leader". All of HN shivers in exaltation at the mention of the word.

The reality is that Firefox would have done much better had Mozilla fired their CEO 15 years ago and never hired another one. All of them executed significantly worse than mere government bonds did.

nicce 3 days ago

CEO is typically needed for-profit purposes on a scale. Donating for devs to build browser without that purpose does not need CEO. Just a lead engineer and accountants.

ghusto 3 days ago

> How are you expecting to run an entity with developers, support, and operations without any leadership?

Unfortunately, CEO is not always leadership.

Aside from that, leadership can come from the people doing the work. It is working in many cases.

a3w 3 days ago

If dev work is paid for by the community, the CEO payments can increase since the budget of Mozilla will stay the same but now have less cost to carry elsewhere?

jm4 3 days ago

I don't know, but ask Mitchell Baker or the board because that's exactly what happened during her tenure.