Help Keep Thunderbird Alive

(updates.thunderbird.net)

134 points | by playfultones 4 hours ago

26 comments

  • narag 46 minutes ago
    After reading a bunch of negative comments here, let me add a little on the bright side. I've been using Thunderbird for many years, currently both at home and at work to manage gmail accounts, pop at home, imap in the office. It works great for me, with a few annoyances but nothing serious.

    As for the donations, Thunderbird seems to be somehow apart from Mozilla now, so I don't think much about specific org structure and will gladly donate.

    Maybe on paper there're dozens of alternatives, but when I consider my specific requirements, I haven't found anything better, YMMV.

    • Twirrim 2 minutes ago
      Likewise. Long time Thunderbird user since the original 1.0 days, for both work and personal use.

      There's been a few ups and downs along the way but I've found it generally "just works" and gets out the way, which is exactly what I want in an email client.

      I've tried almost every single email client I could find on Linux, and several on Windows (including Pegasus mail, if anyone remembers that), but always come back to Thunderbird.

      I've been a regular donator to the project ever since they spun it out to MZLA Technologies Corporation.

    • Skywalker13 30 minutes ago
      I use Thunderbird from the beginning when it was still named Firebird (I switched from Outlook Express). I think that it's a good product because it continues to do the job since more than 20 years. Me too I don't understand the negative comments. It's free (MPL license), it's packaged by Debian. All good. I don't care about Mozilla.
      • Skywalker13 18 minutes ago
        I just check something because my memory as faults... Firebird was the name of Firefox and the mail client was called something like Mozilla mail or something else.
        • CamouflagedKiwi 15 minutes ago
          It was originally Minotaur (when the browser was Phoenix), then they were Firebird and Thunderbird, until the browser renamed to avoid a name clash.
    • Levitating 7 minutes ago
      > Thunderbird seems to be somehow apart from Mozilla now

      I don't think that's the case.

      "Thunderbird is part of MZLA Technologies Corporation, a wholly owned subsidiary of Mozilla Foundation."

      Thunderbirds sourcecode is literally part of the same mercury codebase as Firefox.

      Thunderbird does have a very small team, and I think everyone that uses it should considering donating.

  • mrks_hy 1 hour ago
    I really like Thunderbird, it's the only truly cross-platform mail app, with K9 also now on Android.

    Works perfect, I even migrated my Windows install to Linux just by copying the data folder, absolutely seamless.

    Not sure why people are hating on it so much here. Point to an alternative with the same features?

    • copperx 12 minutes ago
      people point to the rare bug report that deletes absolutely everything in the account. but at this point, I don't even know if it's true.
  • code-blooded 1 hour ago
    Campaigns like this need more info. This page doesn't answer any basic questions.

    How much money do you currently get? How much money do you need and how will you use it? Does it even go directly to Thunderbird development or will be used up by Mozilla for other projects?

    Edit: I found some info here: https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/donate/

    Still, my point stands that communication around it should be super clear and available on all pages where they collect money. It shouldn't require me to search for it.

  • rambambram 1 hour ago
    Just donated. Have been using Thunderbird for years. I once donated to Wikipedia - and they have billions I heard - so might as well donate to another important piece of software for my digital life.

    Now that I read the comments I find out Mozilla might have enough money and a CEO taking in millions. Any recommendations for a good email client on Linux? Just as a backup for now...

    • yorwba 46 minutes ago
      Mozilla Corporation may have enough money, but they don't develop Thunderbird. If you used the donation form on this page, you didn't donate to Mozilla Corporation, but to the company developing Thunderbird. So all is fine.
    • EbNar 25 minutes ago
      I'm just using Evolution. Switched from Thunderbird a few weeks ago. So far, so good.
    • gostsamo 47 minutes ago
      Mozilla and Mozla are two different corporations though both under the mozilla foundation.
  • swiftcoder 1 hour ago
    > MZLA Technologies Corporation is a wholly owned for-profit subsidiary of the Mozilla Foundation and the home of Thunderbird.

    I guess I don't understand why the open-source email client with zero revenue potential is managed by a for-profit subsidiary, nor why that for-profit subsidiary is begging for donations.

    Shouldn't this whole thing be managed by the non-profit Mozilla Foundation?

    • input_sh 1 hour ago
      I don't see them begging anywhere, I only see someone sharing a link to their donate page.

      For what it's worth because legal names are confusingly similar, this is a legal subsidiary of Mozilla that is specific to Thunderbird, as in if you give it money it goes straight into Thunderbird. Many people here pretend to wish to be able to give money directly to Firefox, yet when they can do that for Thunderbird, people here are still finding bullshit reasons not to do so. Pick a lane.

      • swiftcoder 1 hour ago
        > For what it's worth because legal names are confusingly similar, this is a legal subsidiary of Mozilla that is specific to Thunderbird

        Right, I get that, but why is it for-profit? Fund raising is hard enough for nonprofits, convincing people to donate their hard-earned cash to a for-profit is on a whole different level.

        • input_sh 42 minutes ago
          I'm definitely not involved with any of them to know for sure, but my guess would be that's because non-profits come with a lot more regulatory overhead in comparison to for-profits of a similar scale. Not saying that's bad in any way, but for a team that just wants to build the damn thing, for-profits are absolutely less of a hassle.
    • psittacus 1 hour ago
      Not that it answers your question, but the move happened in 2020 to "hire more easily, act more swiftly, and pursue ideas that were previously not possible".

      https://blog.thunderbird.net/2020/01/thunderbirds-new-home/

    • 9cb14c1ec0 37 minutes ago
      Please no. The Mozilla Foundation has lost their way. I don't want them messing with my favorite email client.
  • tristanj 2 hours ago
    Mozilla brings in almost $700 million per year, they have more than enough money to sponsor MZLA/Thunderbird development.
    • shakna 1 hour ago
      Mozilla tried to kill Thunderbird in 2020. They've been talking about not sponsoring it all since 2015.

      They might have the money, but they don't really seem to want anything to do with the project.

      • antisol 6 minutes ago
        Good! I hope they do "kill it off" so that someone who isn't totally incompetent can fork it and take it over.
      • t0lo 1 hour ago
        Mozilla doesn't have the willpower or vision to do anything with anything.
    • Fervicus 43 minutes ago
      What do they do with all that money? According to wikipedia, they had about 750 employees. That's a lot of employees for the amount of useful products they have.
    • reddalo 1 hour ago
      Mozilla is so sad. They have a lot of money and they could fund the development of both Firefox and Thunderbird.

      Yet, they decide to waste almost $7 million per year to pay a CEO and God knows what else.

  • mhitza 1 hour ago
    Wasn't Thunderbird Pro the avenue for extra project financing? Why does it take so long to launch an email service?
    • teekert 1 hour ago
      Was going to say it's here, but it's not indeed, you can join the waitlist: https://www.tb.pro/en-US/
      • vntok 7 minutes ago
        To be fair, "Give for TB awareness" has a nice ring to it...
  • Loic 1 hour ago
    Interestingly, I used Thunderbird for years, it was really the best client for some times on Linux. But as the development stalled, I moved to Gnome Evolution, the nice integration with the general Gnome desktop made the switch less painful (at the start, it was hard, Evolution was not that good). But Evolution improved nicely, less bugs, faster, still well integrated into the desktop and I see no reasons to switch back to another tool.

    The only change in my workflow is that now, I am also using in parallel a stupid command line tool "vibe coded" in Python to read my emails. It allows me to quickly check my emails out of VS Code in a Claude Code session, a bit like when I was doing my emails directly in Emacs :-)

  • alsetmusic 57 minutes ago
    Donated. I don't even use it, but we needed it for opening email archives from clients at my old employer. We need as many options as possible.
  • TekMol 35 minutes ago
    I wish there was a system that lets users put up a donation that is released once a specific bug is fixed or a specific feature is implemented.

    Wouldn't that be cool? The company would have a list of tasks with a dollar amount next to it.

    I for one have been dabbling with a bug in ThunderBird for days now that drives me mad:

    I recently created a folder in Thunderbird and called it "archive". No way would I have expected that this will lead me to a bug and will take hours out of my day: There seems to be no way to get rid of this folder anymore.

    Things I have tried:

    "Keep message archives in" in "Copies and Folders" is disabled. I tried temporarily enabling it, setting it to some other dir and disabling it again, that did not help.

    I have disabled it in "subscribe".

    I cannot rename it.

    There is no "archive" folder in the web interface of my email provider, so if it Thunderbird somehow created it on the server, there seems to be no way to see, let alone delete it again in the web interface.

    I tried deleting archive.msf on disk. That makes the folder disappear after the next start, but it is recreated after about a second.

    I deleted folderTree.json and folderCache.json, that did not help.

    • j-bos 22 minutes ago
      You can do that. It's called a restricted donation. If you make a donation with a cover letter or a check memoizing a specific purpose and the nonprofit accepts it, then by law they're legally obligated to follow through and use that money for that purpose. With bugs it's probably easier because you can just write the bug ID on the check.
      • antisol 1 minute ago
        There are also a couple of bug bounty websites out there for exactly this kind of thing: you and others throw some money into the pot for fixing a given bug or implementing some feature, and coders can claim that bounty once they've written the code.

        I've seen a few of these sites over the years but I can't remember the name of any RN. Search engines are your friend.

  • ano-ther 1 hour ago
    As a lot of people in this thread advise against Thunderbird, what do you recommend instead (preferably for Windows as I am stuck on that)?
    • mrks_hy 58 minutes ago
      I think they are just hating on Mozilla out of pure principles, but without any alternative.
      • hk__2 40 minutes ago
        > I think they are just hating on Mozilla out of pure principles

        Please don’t assume bad faith when the reality is that you don’t know.

    • Skywalker13 49 minutes ago
      Outlook Express

      []->

  • isodev 50 minutes ago
    I wouldn't mind donating if they separate it from Mozilla and move it to Europe.
  • plmpsu 2 hours ago
    I wish I could use Thunderbird at work now that it has Exchange support . Unfortunately we're mandated to use Microsoft Outlook. Outlook feels like it has completely been forgotten by Microsoft. I don't recall the last time they updated anything meaningful in the product (at least on macOS), it's quite a mess of a product. Wishing Thunderbird all the best it's the competition we need.
    • teekert 1 hour ago
      You know what is nice? If you have clients that get automatically switched to "the new Outlook" and loose all imap connections (and they don't work anymore, period).

      Took me so long to learn that the fix was to switch back to the old Outlook.

      • josephg 1 hour ago
        IMAP works in outlook. Its just horrible to set up and half broken. Click "Add account". Then type in your email address, click "Choose provider", select IMAP, then click "Sync directly with IMAP" (dark pattern hidden button). If you don't click that last button, outlook uploads your IMAP email credentials to their own MS Cloud instance, and that proxies all your emails via microsoft's cloud servers. Do they read your email messages for advertising? Nobody knows!

        In my testing, the local IMAP client implementation quite frequently launches a DoS attack against your IMAP server. It'll send the same query requesting new mail messages in a tight loop, limited by the round-trip latency. But luckily, almost nobody uses IMAP via outlook because its so difficult to set up.

    • josephg 1 hour ago
      There's also two different applications which are both "Outlook for Mac".

      If you go into the "Outlook" menu in the app, there's a "Legacy Outlook" button, which relaunches outlook using a completely different binary. The two outlook implementations have different bugs and all sorts of different behaviour.

      Outlook For Mac is free but "legacy outlook" requires a MS365 subscription for some reason.

      Outlook is also not to be confused with Microsoft's "Web Outlook" client, available at outlook.live.com. It all seems totally insane.

      • cutler 1 hour ago
        < It all seems totally insane.

        This is Microsoft we're talking about, right?

  • nottorp 1 hour ago
    Is that a Stripe screen? Set up american style to reduce friction, not supporting 3d secure, which means european credit cards will deny by default?
    • mtmail 36 minutes ago
      Fineprint says it's Stripe. My (european) credit card worked fine.
  • eu 52 minutes ago
    when i used windows i was happy with The Bat email client: https://www.ritlabs.com/en/products/thebat/download.php
  • bulbar 1 hour ago
    I have actually bought a lifetime license for em Client.

    Thunderbird had consistently (Windows / Linux) a bad performance for me and feature and UX wise it has always only been okay for me.

    Still important that a few FOSS solutions for email exist, though.

    • OccamsMirror 1 hour ago
      em Client has no Linux version though?
      • reddalo 1 hour ago
        Not having a Linux version in 2026 is ridiculous.
  • latexr 1 hour ago
    If you press the browser’s back button on the donation page, they send you to a page pestering you for your email address so they can send you a reminder to donate later. Talk about a dark pattern.

    Mozilla has really gone off the rails. An organisation who claims to work on behalf of the user and who makes a web browser, actively hijacking the user experience to peddle for a few dollars?

    Why the heck is Thunderbird “fully funded by financial contributions from [their] users”? Where do the billions of dollars from Google go? All the stupid doomed side projects which no one asked for nor wants and are abandoned after one year?

    • amiga386 46 minutes ago
      > Where do the billions of dollars from Google go?

      They go to the Mozilla Corporation: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mozilla_Corporation#Finances

      The Mozilla Corporation then picks and chooses what it finances within the Mozilla Foundation. Their financial statements don't break down how they spend on software development within the Foundation, it only lists out employee salaries, specific directors' salaries and grants to outsiders... but it would seem Thunderbird doesn't get much if they're out begging.

      https://stateof.mozilla.org/pdf/Mozilla%20Fdn%202024%20-%20A...

      So, as an example, in 2024, it got:

      - $498,218,000 from royalties (e.g. Google)

      - $66,396,000 from paid services (e.g Pocket, VPN) and advertisers

      - $15,782,000 from donations

      And it spent:

      - $290,448,000 on programmer salaries

      - $163,516,000 on manager salaries

      - $36,358,000 on servers, cloud, etc.

      - $20,258,000 on consultants (e.g. branding consultants)

      - $9,573,000 on travel

      - $2,192,000 on grants and fellowships

      So overall, it didn't spent that much on the stupid doomed side projects! It spent a lot more on flying managers and marketing consultants to nice soirees.

      But the real question, not answered by this financial report, is how much programming labour was spent on Thunderbird, versus other Mozilla projects?

      • CamouflagedKiwi 2 minutes ago
        My assumption would be that it's very little, given that Thunderbird was separated out of the Mozilla Corporation to MOZLA (or whatever it's called).

        On the bright side, that actually makes me a bit keener about donating to it; donating to the Mozilla Corporation seems entirely pointless given donations make up ~2.5% of their income, and less than 10% of what they spend just on manager salaries, whereas giving it to Thunderbird might actually have a positive impact.

    • user3939382 46 minutes ago
      LibreWolf should have no reason to exist. It does because Mozilla’s values are largely marketing.
    • ksk23 1 hour ago
      Thought the same..
    • drekipus 45 minutes ago
      I don't think it's a dark pattern. Just a common marketing thing. Not "everything that annoys me" is a dark pattern.
      • addandsubtract 12 minutes ago
        Stealing the function of the back button is a dark pattern.
  • Noaidi 15 minutes ago
    I miss the days we needed Thunderbird for email...such an innocent time.
  • cutler 1 hour ago
    I used TB happily for years on Mac OS but its font rendering on Linux was one of the main reasons I never switched.
  • isaachinman 1 hour ago
    Sorry, isn't Thunderbird meant to be "true FOSS" and essentially feature complete?
  • elAhmo 1 hour ago
    Mozilla is such a weird company, asking users to donate and keep one of their projects alive, while dumping billions in useless initiatives is really dishonest.
  • nisegami 1 hour ago
    I use Thunderbird on both Linux/Android as my sole client for personal email. I'm mostly pretty happy with it, aside from search. My use case is mostly receiving email rather than sending email however. I would be much more amenable to donating if I knew that my donation would be going to support Thunderbird specifically and not rolled up into the parent MZLA Technologies Corporation, but I understand that's usually impractical.
  • BoredPositron 37 minutes ago
    I really think Mozilla has run it's course. Just die already so there is room for something new.
  • shaky-carrousel 2 hours ago
    By donating to MZLA Technologies Corporation? Then I guess I'll switch to KMail or Evolution.
    • 0x000042 1 hour ago
      How is KMail and Evolution at this point? I have not tried them in like 10 years. Are they actively maintained and a real alternative for serious email use?
      • teekert 1 hour ago
        Both are ok last time I tried (last year?) but Geary is default on Gnome distro's now I think [0]. Geary is much more minimal though.

        I myself am pretty spoiled by Protonmail I think, really enjoying that.

        [0] https://github.com/GNOME/geary

  • bravetraveler 2 hours ago
    Anyone using Thunderbird was forced to see this, not sure we (or the well-funded corp) need another round.
  • sergolala 1 hour ago
    Made an account just to say that I will not support the bloated mess that is Thunderbird that pushes on you a new way to configure it, a new layout and new workflows with every major update, makes it difficult to set up text-only mail and messes up line breaks every so often with no way to properly configure it, which should be developed by Mozilla, which is flush with money but rather spends it on theming their software and executive salaries.

    I switched away from Thunderbird about a year ago and couldn't be happier I have made the change.