Mozilla rolled out a neat little trick for impatient browsers today: from this week, Firefox for iOS can generate an AI summary of whatever webpage you’re looking at simply by shaking your iPhone. The feature — bluntly named Shake to Summarize — is meant to turn long articles, recipes, and other longform pages into a short, scannable summary in seconds.
How it works (and how to make it stop)
There are three ways to summon the summary. You can:
- Shake your phone from side to side.
- Tap a little “thunderbolt” icon that appears in the address bar when a page is summarizable.
- Open the page menu (the three dots) and choose Summarize page.
If you don’t like accidental activations — say, because you fumble your phone in your bag — Mozilla says you can switch the feature off at any time. The browser will only attempt a summary when the page contains fewer than 5,000 words, keeping the result manageable and avoiding massive requests.
On-device vs. cloud: the privacy tradeoff
If you’re running iOS 26 on an iPhone 15 Pro or newer, Firefox uses Apple’s on-device language model (Apple Intelligence) to create the summary locally on your phone — no text leaves the device for that work. That’s a deliberate privacy win for people who prefer their reading kept private. If you’re on an older iPhone or an older iOS, Mozilla will send the page text to its own cloud-based AI system, generate the summary there, and then display it in the browser. Mozilla frames this as a pragmatic choice to offer the feature broadly while still taking advantage of Apple’s local AI where available.
Why Mozilla timed this now
Mozilla’s timing isn’t random. Apple is rolling out iOS 26 and pushing Apple Intelligence across its ecosystem, so third-party apps that can use those on-device models suddenly have a privacy-forward option for AI features. Firefox’s move makes it one of the first major third-party browsers to adopt Apple’s on-device tooling in a consumer feature — a subtle win for Mozilla’s privacy-oriented brand and a way to keep its browser feeling modern while still positioning it against Safari and Chrome.
The experience — what a summary looks like
Mozilla’s demos show long recipe pages collapsed into clear ingredient lists and step-by-step bullet points, or long journalism reduced to a handful of paragraphs with the main takeaways. The summary appears over the page so you can quickly scan it, then close it and continue reading the original article if you want more. That makes the feature useful for things like checking whether a long read is worth your time, extracting the key steps from a how-to, or pulling the essentials from dense reporting.
Limits and early availability
At launch, the feature is limited to English language pages in the United States; Mozilla says it plans to expand to other languages and regions later, and it also intends to bring the functionality to Android in time. The 5,000-word cap and initial geo/language limits are sensible early constraints — they keep the system predictable while Mozilla watches for edge cases, accidental activations, and performance or accuracy problems.
What this means for privacy, publishers, and readers
The on-device option will reassure users who are skeptical of sending their reading to cloud servers. But the fallback to Mozilla’s cloud for older phones raises the usual questions about what gets logged, how long content is stored, and how the summaries are produced. Mozilla’s public writeups emphasize consent and a toggle to disable the feature; publishers, meanwhile, are likely to keep an eye on how AI summaries change traffic and engagement with original stories. For readers, it’s simply a fast tool to decide whether to read on — or to extract an ingredient list before you start cooking.
The verdict (for now)
Shake to Summarize is a simple, slightly playful gesture added to a core browsing task: understanding content quickly. It’s not a revolution in AI, but it’s a practical example of how on-device models (when available) can be stitched into everyday apps with privacy benefits. The feature’s usefulness will depend on summary quality, how often users trigger it accidentally, and how broadly Mozilla expands support. Still — for anyone who skips headlines and wants the gist fast — it’s the kind of small UX touch that could become a habit.
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