It’s been a rough week for Mozilla.
Seven days after naming its new CEO, the Mountain View-based corporation best known for developing the popular web browser Firefox has yet to put out the fires it developed for placing Brendan Eich at the company’s helm.
Though Eich’s professional background could color anyone impressed (he created JavaScript, one of the most popular programming languages on the Web, and co-founded mozilla.org), his personal background has one, glaring, black mark for a company committed to the principle of equality: Six years ago, Eich donated $1,000 to the campaign for Proposition 8, California’s now-defunct ban on same-sex marriage.
The donation itself isn’t breaking news; it first became public in 2012 when Eich was still the company’s chief technology officer, and one year before the U.S. Supreme Court hammered the final nail in Prop 8’s coffin. But his elevation to the top job at Mozilla last Monday sparked a renewed backlash, one with public condemnations from employees and boycotts from Firefox developers.
“What we’re asking for is an apology that recognizes the damage and discrimination that that law’s had for gay couples like us,” said Hampton Catlin, CTO of Moovweb and CEO of Rarebit, which he co-founded with his husband, Michael Catlin. The couple pulled their software company’s apps from the Firefox Marketplace in protest of Eich’s appointment.
It wasn’t until after Prop 8 fell that the two were able to marry, and Michael — a British citizen — was able to get his green card. Once the threat of deportation disappeared, so too did barriers to starting their own company.
“We formed this business only because Prop 8 was overturned; it wouldn’t have been possible otherwise,” said Catlin in an interview with msnbc. “The first thing we wanted to do was build apps for the new Firefox phones. We spent two months building them together. So it’s personal that the company we were investing in appointed somebody who had donated to make our company not exist, and had not said that that was a mistake.”
Catlin said the boycott was still in effect, but that they’re no longer calling for Eich to step down — a simple apology would suffice.
Adding to Mozilla’s PR nightmare, three of the company’s six board members — including two former CEOs — left their positions in the wake of Eich’s hiring. According to The Wall Street Journal, the board members did not step down over political views related to Prop 8, but rather because they wanted to see an outside candidate with experience in the mobile industry take over the chief executive slot.
Many Mozillians took to Twitter to voice their disapproval.
Have waited too long to say this. I'm an employee of @mozilla and I'm asking @brendaneich to step down as CEO.
— Chloe Varelidi (@varelidi) March 27, 2014
Have waited too long to say this. I'm an employee of @mozilla and I'm asking @brendaneich to step down as CEO. https://t.co/K3OqeImUnU
— iamjessklein (@iamjessklein) March 27, 2014
Like many @Mozilla staff, I'm taking a stand. I do not support the Board's appointment of @BrendanEich as CEO. #Prop8 http://t.co/msKVNjuhgR
— Kat Braybrooke (@codekat) March 27, 2014
I'm an employee of @mozilla and cannot reconcile having @BrendanEich as CEO with our org's culture & mission. Brendan, please step down.









