Mozilla (MDN)
To ensure the internet is a global public resource, open and accessible to all, through products like Firefox and MDN.
At a Glance
- Web Developers
- Software Engineers
- AI Model Developers
- Internet Users
AI Tools by Mozilla (MDN)
(1)MDN MCP Server
MDN Docs MCP Server
Discussions
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Latest News
Mozilla Launches MDN MCP Server to Power AI Coding Assistants
Mozilla Appoints Anthony Enzor-DeMeo as CEO to Lead AI-First Browser Strategy
Mozilla Foundation Announces Layoffs to Refine Focus on Core Mission
MDN Web Docs Unveils New AI-Powered Search and Discovery Tools
Products & Services
A free and open-source web browser developed by the Mozilla Foundation and its subsidiary, the Mozilla Corporation.
A documentation repository for web developers, covering HTML, CSS, JavaScript, and Web APIs.
A premium subscription service for MDN offering offline access, curated collections, and notifications.
A Model Context Protocol server providing AI agents and IDEs with direct access to MDN's documentation and compatibility data.
Market Position
MDN is the industry-standard, vendor-neutral source for web documentation, competing with proprietary docs from Google (Chrome Dev), Microsoft (Edge Dev), and Apple.
Leadership
Founders
Mitchell Baker
Co-founded the Mozilla project in 1998. Previously a lawyer at Netscape. Served as CEO and Executive Chair of Mozilla.
Brendan Eich
Co-founded the Mozilla project. Creator of the JavaScript programming language. Served as CTO and briefly CEO before founding Brave Software.
Executive Team
Anthony Enzor-DeMeo
CEO, Mozilla Corporation
Former General Manager of Firefox. Previously Chief Product and Technology Officer at Roofstock and VP of Product at Better.com.
Nabiha Syed
Executive Director, Mozilla Foundation
Former CEO of The Markup and a media lawyer. Joins Mozilla to lead the foundation's mission-driven work.
Board of Directors
Founding Story
The Mozilla project was born in 1998 when Netscape open-sourced its browser suite code. The Mozilla Foundation was later established in 2003 to ensure the project's long-term survival as a non-profit, followed by the creation of the Mozilla Corporation in 2005 to manage revenue-generating operations.
Business Model
Revenue Model
Primarily search engine partnership royalties (Google). Secondary revenue from subscriptions (MDN Plus, Mozilla VPN, Firefox Relay) and advertising (Pocket).
Pricing Tiers
Basic access to all documentation and search.
Unlimited collections, offline access, and document notifications.
All Plus features, early access to new features, and a supporter badge.
Target Markets
- Web Developers
- Software Engineers
- AI Model Developers
- Internet Users
- Web development and debugging
- API reference for AI coding agents
- Learning web standards
- Microsoft
- Meta
- Samsung