Accepting Mozilla's requirement for a EULA is the start of a slippery slope. What happens when the next big application also demands a EULA, and the one after that... (and yes, I'm aware of the OpenOffice.org EULA, and think that's a bad idea too).
I would suggest moving to Iceweasel by default, with the menu entry clearly labelled to indicate that it is a web browser.
On first launch it should display a page which briefly describes Mozilla's trademark position and indicates that Iceweasel is simply an unbranded version of Firefox. Finally, include an apt:// URL on that page for anyone who does specifically want to install Firefox.
Accepting Mozilla's requirement for a EULA is the start of a slippery slope. What happens when the next big application also demands a EULA, and the one after that... (and yes, I'm aware of the OpenOffice.org EULA, and think that's a bad idea too).
I would suggest moving to Iceweasel by default, with the menu entry clearly labelled to indicate that it is a web browser.
On first launch it should display a page which briefly describes Mozilla's trademark position and indicates that Iceweasel is simply an unbranded version of Firefox. Finally, include an apt:// URL on that page for anyone who does specifically want to install Firefox.