Well, I'm currently looking for a browser to replace my old Opera 16, which is no longer supported. I don't want to use anything Google-based as long as I can help it, so I was leaning towards Firefox. Right now I'm sure of one thing - no more Firefox for me. I might even resort to using Chrome, if desperate, but I will surely never use a browser by company that gives in for gay propaganda. I can see that some most of you would think exactly other way 'round; that's all fine and dandy. If a company declares itself on one or another side of some world-view conflict, it should be expected that it will receive support from one side and boycott from the other. But there are two things I would like to notice here:
1. Yes, business is all about money, with no moral implications whatsoever. Of course, people can boycott immoral business, thus making it earn less money and turn more moral... To earn more censored money. If you want your own company to follow some guidelines, that's OK. If you want companies that make stuff you buy follow the same guidelines - hard luck. Don't buy their stuff if you don't like them, but there is no inherent reason for business to follow any sort of moral guidelines.
2. I think that person should be allowed to do whatever they want. I don't understand so-called anti-discrimination laws, that lead to crazy results. If a business owner doesn't want to hire black people, or Polish people, or women, or whoever else, nobody should force him to do that. But you can stop buying there, if you don't like it. That's simple and effective way to make everybody happy, because if somebody is unacceptable to other people, he will be driven out of business. Why make government intervene*?
*Mind you, government itself might need some form of such laws (see: slave states). It's just that I don't really see the difference between prosecuting racists and members of a race. Let live and let live, and hang the criminals.