Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Canada Firefox GUI Mozilla Technology

MetaLab Accuses Mozilla of Ripping Off UI Elements In Mockups 159

CWmike writes "Canadian interface design firm MetaLab has accused Mozilla of stealing user interface elements for a development tool in the browser maker's Jetpack project, which aims to simplify add-on making. MetaLab leveled the charges on Tuesday when the 11-person firm's founder, Andrew Wilkinson, blogged about the similarities between his company's designs and those posted by Mozilla for FlightDeck, a Jetpack editor. 'What they did was pretty ridiculous,' Wilkinson said on Thursday. 'There's a difference between inspiration versus ripping something off,' he said. 'The measurements of the graphic elements [Mozilla took from us] were the exact same, the very same pixels. When someone takes your images from the server hosting them, that's crossing the line.' Mozilla apologized to MetaLab on Wednesday, saying in a blog post, 'While the design direction being implemented does not utilize these design elements, we inadvertently included the early mockups in our blog post and video announcing the next phase of development for the Jetpack SDK ... We sincerely apologize to MetaLab for incorporating design elements from their web site in our early mockups and for posting them publicly without proper attribution.'" Alexander Limi of the Firefox User Experience Team points out that MetaLab has accepted the apology, too — worth bearing in mind.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

MetaLab Accuses Mozilla of Ripping Off UI Elements In Mockups

Comments Filter:
  • by nacturation ( 646836 ) * <nacturation AT gmail DOT com> on Thursday March 11, 2010 @10:10PM (#31447868) Journal

    Without stealing of ideas, we wouldn't have Open Office which implemented feature-for-feature what Microsoft Office has. Without stealing, we wouldn't have KDE and Gnome with implemented many features from Windows and OS X. How could open source survive without it? :)

    • by The Turd Burglar ( 1765270 ) on Thursday March 11, 2010 @10:11PM (#31447878)

      How could open source survive without it? :)

      Coming up with your own ideas instead of cloning everyone else's?

      • by Cryacin ( 657549 )
        Blame it on Canada!
      • by Fluffeh ( 1273756 ) on Thursday March 11, 2010 @11:12PM (#31448264)

        How could open source survive without it? :)

        Coming up with your own ideas instead of cloning everyone else's?

        That depends on what your open source project is. If you want to replace a current application with an open source one, coming up with your own ideas of how to implement it won't be the best option. If I wanted my company to replace their versions of Microsoft Word with an open source word processor, I would want the application to reliably and hopefully in a simple way do all that Microsoft Word currently does. There is no point in making a word processor if it's so different and can do all these other things if it can't do the things I need it to do.

        Coming up with ideas has nothing to do with open/prop source.

        When making something new, to look into a market/niche that isn't being catered for currently, come up with new ideas, do things that no-one has done already. Be creative. When trying to take a market from someone else or to replace a product, copy the functionality features - but even at that point, it would be better to look at how those functions and features might be improved in the process. Giving someone a product that does exactly the same thing won't give them any incentive at all to change. Giving them a product that does the same things, but better/simpler/easier/quicker is when you will have a product worth swapping to.

      • by PitaBred ( 632671 ) <slashdot&pitabred,dyndns,org> on Thursday March 11, 2010 @11:18PM (#31448296) Homepage

        That's impossible. You can't live in a vacuum, and EVERYTHING is derivative to one degree or another.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          There's a difference between being derivative and being an attempt at a 1:1 copy.

          • by paeanblack ( 191171 ) on Thursday March 11, 2010 @11:42PM (#31448420)

            There's a difference between being derivative and being an attempt at a 1:1 copy.

            I disagree.

            Cheers,
            --e^x

          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            by Ash Vince ( 602485 )

            There's a difference between being derivative and being an attempt at a 1:1 copy.

            The problem with this is the metalab seem to be implying Mozilla ripped them off, they actually have no idea who it was (based on RTFA, not doing any additional research).

            It seems that Metalab submitted a design for this project, but it is not the design that mozilla used. Mozilla went with a different design that was ripped off from Metalabs homepage. That might just mean someone else saw the same invite to tender that Metalab did and searched various design company websites until they found something half

      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        Thats impossible, even for a computer.

        • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

          by nacturation ( 646836 ) *

          Thats impossible, even for a computer.

          It's not impossible. I used to bullseye womp rats in my T-16 back home, they're not much bigger than two meters.

          • Wait a minute. Are they saying that a computer can't maintain a target lock on a stationary two meter diameter target?
      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        by ae1294 ( 1547521 )

        Coming up with your own ideas instead of cloning everyone else's?

        Xerox called and offered you a job to speak out against Microsoft and Apple for stealing all their really good ideas. I told them you thought that stealing their money for something you do for free would be stealing... They said they fully understood and also welcomed me to something called the 'Tautology club'.... I'm not sure if I'm sure about what that word really means...

      • Fuck that. If something is a good idea, everyone should use it. If you don't like it, patent it or copyright it. Oh, you can't? Tough.
      • by realityimpaired ( 1668397 ) on Friday March 12, 2010 @08:22AM (#31450258)

        Why reinvent the wheel? If there's a particular design/UI element that's in use, has been updated and refined for decades, and is generally accepted as the easiest or most efficient, or even just the most familiar way to do things, why reinvent it? If you eschew it completely, you're likely to alienate a significant portion of your user base.

        • by jedidiah ( 1196 )

          If certain interfaces didn't mock/copy/clone others, they would be constantly criticized by troll for being different.

      • by jedidiah ( 1196 )

        How is that working for Microsoft, Apple and all of the Unix vendors exactly?

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Without stealing, we wouldn't have many works of Shakespeare or Bach, both of whom copied liberally from their Italian counterparts. (Of course that was before copyright existed, hence plagiarism of ideas was not only legal, but accepted.)

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward

        If we lump patents with copyrights, that was also the time when people who invented great stuff tended to die in poverty after the entire western world "stole their imaginary property" (a.k.a. "was inspired by their ideas"):
        http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_Crompton

    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 11, 2010 @10:21PM (#31447960)

      Without stealing, we wouldn't have KDE and Gnome with implemented many features from Windows and OS X.

      Exactly. The worst part was how the KDE team went FORWARD in time, completely ripped off Windows 7 and then went BACK in time and implemented KDE4 before Windows 7 was even in beta! The nerve!

      (Anonymous for obvious reasons)

      • by The End Of Days ( 1243248 ) on Thursday March 11, 2010 @10:29PM (#31448036)

        (Anonymous for obvious reasons)

        Yeah, defending KDE on Slashdot is very risky.

        • by ae1294 ( 1547521 )

          Yeah, defending KDE on Slashdot is very risky.

          Well you do have to watch out for gromes... I hear they have sharp pointy teeth and a horrible child-like voice that is very unnerving and rather unexpected giving their demonic nature...

      • And where did they get their time machine from? Plot thickens.
      • by DMiax ( 915735 )
        Also worth noting that the mokups and plans for the plasma dashboard predate the OSX one.
      • What's similar about KDE4 and 7? All the new features in the latter, compared to Vista, don't have any direct analogs in KDE (so far as I know).

        KDE vs Vista would be a more interesting comparison... but I still strongly suspect that the whole "ooh shiny" angle was picked from OS X rather than KDE. But if you can show otherwise, by demonstrating a feature unique to KDE that was copied, by all means, go ahead!

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by psithurism ( 1642461 )

      Without stealing of ideas, we wouldn't have Open Office which implemented feature-for-feature what Microsoft Office has. Without stealing, we wouldn't have KDE and Gnome with implemented many features from Windows and OS X. How could open source survive without it? :)

      Microsoft Word is the standard in word processing, it was reasonable to get a half functional free equivalent for users who couldn't run MSWord, but mozilla is huge and quite capabable of creating their own designs, while the firm they stole from is much smaller and not a standard in any way.

    • Your examples aren't the same as what happened here. It's not that MetaLab's product influenced the design elements in Mozzila's Jetpack, It's the fact that the gui elements are exactly the same. None of your examples are exactly the same and some of them have even gone back the other direction with open source software inspiring closed source software. Too be fair to Mozzila though, it was just a mock-up which is aimed at getting the point across.

    • Under 30, are you? (Score:3, Insightful)

      by xzvf ( 924443 )
      Lotus 123, Visicalc, WordPerfect, ... I guess you can give MS PowerPoint.
      • by Saint Stephen ( 19450 ) on Thursday March 11, 2010 @10:41PM (#31448092) Homepage Journal

        I guess you forgot Harvard Graphics :-)

        • Well I had until your post.
          Excuse me while I go rinse my brain with bleach, and start my mental conditioning over.
      • Lotus 123, Visicalc, WordPerfect, ... I guess you can give MS PowerPoint.

        Also Access from dBase. It is interesting that you include both Lotus 123 and Visicalc. It just goes to show that borrowing ideas has gone on since year dot. Even Visicalc was just a pretty interface to existing spreadsheet programs.

        Just imagine how crap software would be these days if they had software patents back then. We would still be having to run our spreadsheet in non-interactive batch mode.

        That's why I have no problems at all with incorporating ideas from proprietary software into open source proje

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by jedidiah ( 1196 )

          > My only beef is when people get all high and mighty about ideas being borrowed in the
          > other direction. Who cares if Microsoft or Apple take ideas that started in the open
          > source world. The end result is an improved user experience for all software.

          No one cares about what Microsoft or Apple copies about until they make noises about "freedom to innovate" or start patent trolling.

          They get flack for lying and hypocrisy, not theft.

    • Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)

      by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday March 11, 2010 @11:01PM (#31448222)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by keeboo ( 724305 )

      Without stealing of ideas, we wouldn't have Open Office which implemented feature-for-feature what Microsoft Office has. Without stealing, we wouldn't have KDE and Gnome with implemented many features from Windows and OS X. How could open source survive without it? :)

      Feeling trolly today?

      Both Apple and Microsoft copied from Xerox, Lotus etc.
      The difference is that, when a FOSS copies from something else, it does not have the chutzpah to claim originality.

      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        by PitaBred ( 632671 )

        That's because we sent the OSS marketers along with the telephone sanitizers on the B-ark.

      • Feeling trolly today?

        A little. Hopefully the smiley tempered it.

      • "Feeling trolly today?"

        Did you read what they're accused of stealing? They're accused of stealing website design.

        Here's a photo demonstrating exactly what they're accused of stealing [amazonaws.com]

        While I'd admit they look very similar (FlightDeck looks better IMHO) this is the internet, every well designed site ends up on other sites. How many websites look like Amazon? Look at all the identical looking blogs created with wordpress. Honestly MetaLab I think you're mad they took your design and improved upon
      • The difference is that, when a FOSS copies from something else, it does not have the chutzpah to claim originality.

        I must have been delusional when I thought I read all those posts on Slashdot Games saying that Frozen Bubble and Battle for Wesnoth were original...

        • by keeboo ( 724305 )

          The difference is that, when a FOSS copies from something else, it does not have the chutzpah to claim originality.

          I must have been delusional when I thought I read all those posts on Slashdot Games saying that Frozen Bubble and Battle for Wesnoth were original...

          Dunno, it's possible someone wrote that. Still, I cannot find any originality claim in either projects' websites.

          Personally, I could never understand the fanboyism behind Frozen Bubble. It looks like a (polished) 1980s game.

    • by indiechild ( 541156 ) on Thursday March 11, 2010 @11:40PM (#31448400)

      The same old tired excuse -- did you even look at the article and linked blog entry? This isn't about stealing of ideas, this is stealing work pixel-for-pixel. That's never OK, and has nothing to do with open source or "artistic inspiration".

      • The same old tired excuse -- did you even look at the article and linked blog entry?

        Um... this is Slashdot, right?

      • > This isn't about stealing of ideas, this is stealing work pixel-for-pixel. That's never OK.

        I have two questions. How does one "steal" pixels and why is it not ok? If elements of their UI look good, I say use them. There is NO WAY that it harms the original application, and I'm pretty sure that you can't copyright a piece of a UI.
        • Application 1 pays a staff of graphic designers and UI designers to create images and a well thought out design. That cost must be included in the price of the product in order to make profit. Application two grabs finished images straight out off of the other companies website and slaps them into their product with no effort or cost. Application 2 is now benefiting off the work of Application 1's staff. Application 1 doesn't look any better for the extra money spent on it, and has a higher cost.

          Besides

    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      Without stealing, we'd each have to independently invent the wheel and discover fire.

    • Most people don't understand how stuff work. Just learn where is a icon, and learn to press it, and press again on other icon with other name... don't learn to use stuff, learn to run these "small scripts". If you moves that icon, you break his "script", if you changes the icon too much, or removes it, the user become lost.
      So to have user work with your stuff ( a Office tools program, or a Desktop ) you have to completelly copy what the users have learn. This is some menus and icons in a Office program

  • Snore (Score:5, Insightful)

    by some_guy_88 ( 1306769 ) on Thursday March 11, 2010 @10:14PM (#31447892) Homepage

    Company does something wrong.

    Company apologizes.

    Accuser accepts apology.

    Slow news day?

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Considering this is slashdot (and timothy), a story that is not openly aiming at generating hate, flame & modtroll fest is indeed, well, quite a story.
      • by Ihmhi ( 1206036 )

        I see lots of "Oh great, another dumbass post from $EDITOR".

        Are there any editors than anyone here likes or thinks is remotely competent whatsoever?

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by ae1294 ( 1547521 )

      Slow news day?

      The days are getting so slow around here that they have had to resort to traveling into the distant past to find stories to post.

      But yeah everyone keeps saying 1:1 copy - the horror! I bet most of these same people are guilty of doing this with their own program GUI's or websites. Honestly we all know that the 'make it shiny' peoples aren't always the 'make it stable' peoples so this really just isn't a big deal. It's a damn mock up plus the underlining code is totally different. It's not like when Microsof

      • To be fair... Slashdot was, for a while, free of most people who would associate with Apple or Microsoft. It seems to be a more recent trend.

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by hey! ( 33014 )

      Your haiku does no scan. How about

      Company does wrong,
      then later says it's sorry.
      It's a slow news day.

  • by R.Mo_Robert ( 737913 ) on Thursday March 11, 2010 @10:19PM (#31447932)

    The summary alludes to this, but just in case (since 90% of people who comment probably won't read past the headline):

    Update: I just got off the phone with the team at Mozilla, who apologized and clarified a few things. The design which used our site’s design elements was a development build and according to them the design has been changed in newer builds. That said, it was used in their launch video as well as their blog post announcing the product. They told me that that the team who put together the blog post and video was unaware of the similarities at the time of inclusion. We’ve asked for a public apology, and I’ll be doing a follow-up post tomorrow [and they did].

  • by OnlyJedi ( 709288 ) on Thursday March 11, 2010 @10:26PM (#31448006) Homepage
    So, a company decided to take shortcuts in creating a mockup of a project still in early development, and is being blasted because of it? Seriously, this was nowhere near a final release or even a beta release. It was a mockup, designed solely to get across an idea of what the final product interface would look like. Tasking an art team to create all-new icons and artwork is generally counter to the idea of the quick-and-dirty nature of mockups.
    • Apologists shrug it off. News at 11.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 11, 2010 @10:43PM (#31448112)

      So, a company decided to take shortcuts in creating a mockup

      No, they showed it to the public. Public demo trumps mockup, and they deserve a bit of flak for this one.

      • by QuantumG ( 50515 ) *

        meh, copyright can fuck right off.. How would you even show damage in a case like this? Stupidity.

        • by martas ( 1439879 )
          the only thing worse than a mistake is over-correcting for it.

          a world without any copyright/patent law is a sad, sad world. kinda like a world where stealing or murder are legal.
          • by Wildclaw ( 15718 )

            the only thing worse than a mistake is over-correcting for it.

            OK.

            a world without any copyright/patent law is a sad, sad world. kinda like a world where stealing or murder are legal.

            Although from this I guess over-correcting analogies is perfectly fine.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 11, 2010 @10:53PM (#31448172)

      Well, Mozilla reject their bid proposal, where Metalabs could've earned $XXX for their labor, but went ahead and used their design for their own purposes, regardless if it's just a mockup. It's like if you told potential investors or your great new gadget, and in good faith did not make them sign a NDA (those are so pretentious unless you're *both* very big companies), rejected your idea, but went ahead and placed an RFP, or beta test, or whatever using your idea as a skeleton.

      Even something small as a bid proposal takes time and money to put together: from programmers, to art & design guys, to marketing, and sales.

  • Good thing. (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Ekuryua ( 940558 ) on Thursday March 11, 2010 @10:26PM (#31448010) Homepage
    Jetpack is pretty much an attempt at making firefox extensions greasemonkey scripts that hold no actual application power. They were talking of removing normal extension support for that fake sugary stuff. Plus the idea that normal people will be making quick extensions is just ridiculous. Making a normal ff extension is not that hard, it's all quite documented and you can take any simple extension as base template if scared...
    • Re:Good thing. (Score:5, Informative)

      by FreakCERS ( 517467 ) <cers@geWELTYeksbynature.dk minus author> on Thursday March 11, 2010 @11:56PM (#31448486) Homepage
      I'm sorry, but most of your assertions are blatantly untrue.

      1) Extensions created with Jetpack (the actual framework, not the prototype based on ideas from Ubiquity) have to a large extent the same powers as an old-style extension. There is a certain number of capabilities provided, but if you need more, you can write your own capabilities, share them, or indeed use others users shared capabilities.

      2) As an official Jetpack Ambassador, and Ubiquity core developer (as previously mentioned, the base of some of the ideas for Jetpack), I can honestly say that I have never heard talks about ditching regular extensions, except from user-comments on sites like Slashdot. Indeed, many of us involved with the project have addressed this issue on several occasions.

      3) The idea was never for "normal people" to make extensions, it was to widen the audience from a very few XUL developers (I believe the number is in the low end of 4-5000), to web-developers in general.

      There are several interesting possibilities with this, amongst them companies using existing web developers in their employment to create work-flow enhancing extensions quickly, and letting website developers create new ways of interacting with their site. Especially in the latter case, the extensive security model in Jetpack compared with old-style extensions, and the ease of install/uninstall is paramount.

      Best regards,
      -- cers / Christian Sonne
  • Changed (Score:4, Informative)

    by Kohenkatz ( 1166461 ) on Thursday March 11, 2010 @10:27PM (#31448022) Journal
    Here is what it looks like now: http://gallery.ymkatz.net/mozilla%20jetpack.png [ymkatz.net]
  • Seriously, there are only a few ways you can make a decent UI that is familiar. Sharing user interfaces is a -good thing- when it comes down to it, the more familiar an application is, the easier it is to use. Imagine if every single program had a radically different UI. You opened up Firefox and it looked nothing like IE, which looked nothing like Opera which looked nothing like Chrome, if this happened probably everyone would still be using Mosaic. The more UIs borrow from one another, the easier they are
  • by noidentity ( 188756 ) on Thursday March 11, 2010 @11:05PM (#31448246)
    I just wanted to note that apparently Mozilla didn't remove anything from MetLab's servers; all data was intact and unharmed. Things were copied, yes, but that didn't prevent MetLab from continuing to use their UI elements, unlike what their accusations make it sound like (last time I had my car stolen, I couldn't drive it until I got it back, but maybe MetLab inhabits a different dimension than me).
  • What does it matter if it was a mockup or the real thing? Last I checked using "UI elements" was not protected by copyright or patents. This is the same as the Microsoft and Apple "Look-and-feel" lawsuit from last century. The original complaint was about mockups using straight copied images which could be a copyright infraction but the final product even if it looked nearly identical would be non-infringing. KDE and GNOME both have UI themes that completely rip off various versions of Windows and MacOS. Th

  • by timmarhy ( 659436 ) on Thursday March 11, 2010 @11:45PM (#31448428)
    stop and think of the comments if the situation was reversed.

    yes thats right, slashdot is as bad as fox news.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      stop and think of the comments if the situation was reversed.

      yes thats right, slashdot is as bad as fox news.

      More like people are just people. Our experiences give us bias, and there is nobody who can achieve perfect objectivity in every situation. People here have a propensity to cheer for open source software. Through their own experiences, Fox viewers have a different perspective. It's not bad, it's just life. The alternative would be to throw out all emotion and become as the Vulcans. Yes, we're all biased. Yes, we're all emotional. Yes, we're all hypocrites--especially those of us who pretend to have

    • by martas ( 1439879 )
      i LOLed. that's gotta be the most insulting thing anyone's ever said about poor old /.. (yes, i do put a period after /. if it's the end of the sentence.)
  • by Odinlake ( 1057938 ) on Friday March 12, 2010 @02:36AM (#31449010)
    X slights Y, apologizes. Y accepts apology. Isn't it a rather depressing thought that this kind of upright behaviour apparently is unusual enough that it makes news?
    • by Ma8thew ( 861741 )
      Would you be saying that if it were Microsoft instead of Mozilla?
      • M$ playing nice.. What have you been smoking?
        • Cheap shot, couldn't stop myself, know there actually was a similar instance some time ago with M$. Anyway, yes, I would say the same thing. Maybe I even did. M$ has nothing to do with it.
  • I hadn't heard of MetaLab before. Now, I have.

    Mission accomplished.

  • ...What an unusual story of reasonable, fair minded business professionals that seem ethical, responsive, and willing to admit or forgive a mistake. This is news, these days.
  • I am dumbfounded at how many times the word "steal" is used in these replies. Truly the culture thieves (Disney, RIAA, MPAA, etc.) have already won.

"Protozoa are small, and bacteria are small, but viruses are smaller than the both put together."

Working...