Mozilla has appointed Anthony Enzor-DeMeo as Chief Executive Officer of Mozilla Corporation, formalizing a leadership transition as the company recalibrates its role in a browser market increasingly shaped by artificial intelligence. Enzor-DeMeo, who previously served as general manager of Firefox, succeeds interim CEO Laura Chambers, who guided the organization through a period marked by restructuring, workforce reductions, and early efforts to diversify revenue beyond search. Chambers will remain involved with Mozilla as a member of its board, while Enzor-DeMeo takes on responsibility for steering the company’s commercial and product strategy.
Enzor-DeMeo stated, “It is a privilege to lead an organization with a long history of standing up for people and building technology that puts them first,” and added that Mozilla has an important role as expectations around digital products continue to shift. Looking ahead, DeMeo said that Mozilla will focus on becoming a trusted software company, with clear standards for product design, monetization, and growth. “People want software that is fast and modern, but also honest about what it does,” DeMeo said, noting that users want clarity, transparency, and meaningful choices.
Looking ahead, Enzor-DeMeo said Mozilla will focus on building a trusted software portfolio anchored by Firefox, with AI features introduced as an option rather than a default. The strategy also includes aligning monetization more closely with user trust and expanding Firefox beyond a standalone browser into a broader ecosystem of products. Mozilla plans to measure success through both market performance and mission impact, with priorities that include responsible AI development, reduced reliance on search revenue, and attracting new generations of users as the browser regains importance as a central interface for digital life.