Every few Firefox releases there's one where they helpfully throw new junk in your face or mess with your settings. Firefox 118 is both.
Mozilla has added a translation engine that they say is client-side, based on an engine called Bergamot that they created. They removed all languages other than the one I'm writing in from my settings, even though I read (poorly, and for sport) in other languages. And then they put a pop-up over every page that's not in English - including some I've deliberately switched to other languages - offering to translate it.
Getting rid of this requires an about:config hack that I saw only on The Site We've Chosen Not to Use. So here's the incantation:
browser.translations.automaticallyPopup false
and if you're really angry
browser.translations.enable false
And put back any languages it removed from your site preferences.
Honestly, if I didn't know these people weren't Google, I'd be really suspicious. But with Chrome's stellar Ad Privacy, I have to put up with Mozilla's crap, as the clock has to be ticking even for the 'good guy' Chromium derivatives.
Would you like to translate:
Yes, always for this language.
No, not notary.
Never for this language.
A drop down could offer options to turn off totally, or go to further settings. I think in the effort to keep things simple, software is often oversimplified. Sure, some users need guidance. Many don’t.
I prefer the addon actively, because it has not removed a bunch of important languages I translate. Russian is by far the most I translate, apart from the occasional CJK, for which I need Google.
We need an offline translator for CJK webpages and documents. It is the worst issue.
They are talking about the behavior of Mozilla, which is a web browser developer. So how would switching search engine help?
Also Orion is not an alternative unless you exclusively use Apple products and operating systems, which would be a whole other problem of vendor lock-in and monopolistic behavior.