Firefox 148 Launches with AI Kill Switch — Let Users Permanently Disable All AI Features
Original: Firefox 148 Launches with AI Kill Switch Feature and More Enhancements View original →
The AI Kill Switch: Firefox's Defining New Feature
Mozilla Firefox 148 has shipped with a headline feature that sets it apart from other major browsers: an AI Kill Switch. Users can navigate to Settings > AI Controls and toggle 'Block AI Enhancements' to permanently disable all AI functionality within the browser.
How It Works
The critical distinction is permanence. Mozilla states that "once AI features are turned off, future updates will not override this choice." This means users won't need to re-disable AI features after every browser update — a common frustration with software that incrementally adds AI without user consent. The kill switch also comes with granular control: users can block cloud-based AI services while retaining local capabilities like on-device translation.
What Gets Blocked
When activated, the kill switch prevents in-app notifications promoting AI features and removes any AI models that have already been downloaded to the device. Firefox has been incrementally adding AI capabilities — chatbot integrations, AI assistants, on-device translation — and this switch provides a single toggle to disable all of them at once.
Additional Firefox 148 Highlights
Beyond the AI controls, Firefox 148 brings several other notable changes. Security enhancements include integration of the Trusted Types API and Sanitizer API to combat cross-site scripting (XSS) attacks. Accessibility improvements include better screen reader compatibility for mathematical formulas in PDFs. Other new features include Firefox Backup on Windows 10, Vietnamese and Traditional Chinese translation support, new tab wallpapers for container tabs, and service worker support for WebGPU for developers.
A Signal on AI Philosophy
The AI Kill Switch is a meaningful statement about Mozilla's approach. As the only major independent browser vendor, Firefox has historically positioned itself as the privacy-focused alternative. Offering users an explicit, persistent way to opt out of AI — rather than burying it in obscure settings — aligns with that positioning. It also reflects growing user concern about AI being quietly embedded into everyday tools without meaningful consent.
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