Most companies have some kind of agenda, yes. I wouldn't exactly begrudge hammersmiths having opinions related to hammers, for example.
But if you look at the breadth of company politics at say, Brave or Vivaldi, and contrast those with Mozilla, it's night and day. Brave and Vivaldi have politics of privacy and user control, and it shows. Mozilla has many other concerns, like cultural coolness (hello, color themes by an ex-Nike designer. Street smart, eh?).
There are narrow, relevant-to-topic stances on things which companies very well should have.
But if you look at the breadth of company politics at say, Brave or Vivaldi, and contrast those with Mozilla, it's night and day. Brave and Vivaldi have politics of privacy and user control, and it shows. Mozilla has many other concerns, like cultural coolness (hello, color themes by an ex-Nike designer. Street smart, eh?).
There are narrow, relevant-to-topic stances on things which companies very well should have.