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Mozilla welcomes competition from Google's Chrome

Google's entry into the open-source-browser arena will spur innovation, says Mozilla chief executive John Lilly
Written by Brett Winterford, Contributor

Mozilla chief executive John Lilly on Tuesday waxed philosophical about the release of Google's new web browser, Chrome, despite the launch signalling an attempt by the search giant — Mozilla's major financier — to become its biggest competitor.

The arrival of Chrome, Lilly said, was inevitable.

"It should come as no real surprise that Google has done something here: their business is the web, and they've got clear opinions on how things should be," Lilly wrote in his blog. "Chrome will be a browser optimised for the things that they see as important."

The beta version of Chrome, to be available on Tuesday for Windows systems, is an obvious alternative to Firefox for those web surfers fed up with Microsoft's long-dominant Internet Explorer browser.

Mozilla and Google have had a long and very fruitful relationship. Google is the default search engine on the Mozilla Firefox browser, and pays Mozilla large sums for the privilege: $56m (£31m) of the $66m (£37m) Mozilla Corporation made in 2006.

However, Lilly, writing in his blog, said he welcomed the competition posed by Google. Lilly said Mozilla would continue its financial relationship with Google until 2011 and would continue to work with the search giant on technical collaborations such as crash reports system Breakpad.

Paul Kim, vice president of marketing for Mozilla, said that Google staff would be allowed to continue to contribute to the Mozilla Foundation's projects. "As a 100 percent open-source project, we welcome contributions to Firefox from everyone," he said.

"More smart people thinking about ways to make the web good for normal human beings is good — absolutely," Lilly said.

"Competition often results in innovation of one sort or another; in the browser you can see that this is true in spades this year, with huge JavaScript performance increases, security process advances, and user interface breakthroughs. I'd expect that to continue now that Google has thrown their hat in the ring," Lilly said.

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