Stallman On Unity Dash: Canonical Will Have To Give Users' Data To Governments
Giorgio Maone writes "Ubuntu developer and fellow Mozillian Benjamin Kerensa chatted with various people about the new Amazon Product Results in the Ubuntu 12.10 Unity Dash. Among them, Richard Stallman told him that this feature is bad because:
1. 'If Canonical gets this data, it will be forced to hand it over to various governments.'; 2. Amazon is bad. Concerned people can disable remote data retrieval for any lens and scopes or, more surgically, use sudo apt-get remove unity-lens-shopping."
if a company collects any data on you it's inevitable the government will try and take it.
Even if you can uninstall this feature, by merely using Ubuntu you're implicitly supporting them, and their intentions obviously aren't very nice if they're doing it. Use a different distro, there are also many other issues with Ubuntu to keep using it anyway.
This shouldn't be surprising. If someone is in a position to collect data, and they do so, governments can get that data. Pretty much everyone collects data when you interact with their services. To paraphrase Eric Schmidt, If you don't want anyone to know what you're doing online, don't do things online.
Stallman gave this speech, as all his speeches, from a secret underground cave bunker on the moon, the only place he's convinced no one can get him. His fears of advancement in space travel however have now caused him to announce his future plans to move his home to a commonly used metaphor, in the hopes that living inside an actual metaphor will present even more security.
Then install debian.
http://xkcd.com/1095/
Mod parent +1 funny.
Some how I think you've missed the point.
These comments are my personal opinions and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the other voices in my head.
Even if we accept Stallman's rather innacurate description of ALEC's activities, neither campaign finance, gun rights, or minimum wage laws have anything to do with the free software movement. Stallman's belief to the contrary, Linux is not his personal political hobby horse.
And use kubuntu instead!
Religion is what happens when nature strikes and groupthink goes wrong.
But then, from Shuttleworth's words:
Seriously? it should "let me find"? You put tons of advertises in user's computers *and* tons of user's data on Amazon servers and you didn't provide it as opt-in feature? And I can't even disable it [until a rushed update came out]?
Good job! You're alienating the most important thing you gained so far, your users. You know, not only it is important to bring Ubuntu in the mainstream: you need to be sure you don't get there alone, you know?
It seems another case of "shut up, we know better than users what users really want".
Do you?
well then what do you recommend today for someone looking for an easy-to-use, well-supported and active distro that will do a good job of detecting your hardware and not force you to hunt down or write your own device drivers?
Linux Mint is way more legitimate in every way... UBUNTU IS NOT RELEVANT
It may have changed — my last install of Mint was Helena — but is Mint not based on Ubuntu?
For Mint, I'd have thought Ubuntu was very relevant indeed.
"He's a dirty fucking hippy." who is usually proven correct, and who doesn't prefer comfortable slavery to freedom.
I don't care if he smells like a burning landfill, he's done more for freedom than either of us ever will.
"This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
Mageia, even though it's got some pretty awful bugs to iron out, is moving in the right direction.
I consider myself a fairly well-informed geek, and a regular reader of Slashdot.
And, as the links all appear Slashdotted, I have no fucking clue what the summary talks about. I recognize a lot of the words, the overall tone interested me enough to "look inside", but... What does "Unity Dash" mean, why does it mean giving info to governments, and what does Amazon have to do with turning off lenses and scopes? And what lenses and scopes?
And yes, I know about Ubuntu's recent whoring itself to Amazon for ad placement on the desktop, but that seems to have nothing to do with the rest of the summary.
Anyone have a better explanation?
Thanks /., I've now added `sudo apt-get remove unity-lens-shopping` to my to do list.
There is a Debian version of mint now as well. My boss has been testing it for deployment on all the end user machines at work. He's tired of Windows problems.
Personally, I think Debian is the best Linux distro these days. It's stable and it actually works on most computers I've tried to use it on with the exception of my laptop. Even then, SID worked.
People who run mint or arch are looking for shiny. It's the latest trend just as Ubuntu was. Most distros are based off of Debian.. that's the hint that Debian is the thing to use.
In 5 years, mint will be just as mocked as Ubuntu or Gentoo or any other has been distro. That's just how the linux world is. Somehow Debian has stood the test of time.
...yes because the only alternative to Crassus Maximus is Julius Ceasar.
A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
Need to know about your motherboard?
lspci
This is the same information that the kernel uses to determine what device drivers to load for you. Mandrake took advantage of this for the very first 3D card (voodoo) supported by Linux and did it all automagically.
The same goes for USB.
While LIRC is a convoluted a beast. It's also had automated configuration support since 2007.
A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
Stallman lives by a particular ethical code. Despite the widespread belief that people should separate their ethical beliefs from their work, Stallman does not actually do so, and thus if he believes that Amazon is doing unethical things (which is not really a stretch), he is not going to support the idea of taking his software (which is part of the basis of Ubuntu) and using it to support Amazon financially. I do not see why he should be criticized for that, any more than people should be criticized for refusing to seek employment with companies whose behavior they object to.
Palm trees and 8
I had a look at Mint, but it doesn't appear to have Unity. So, back to Ubuntu, then.
Nothing stops you from compiling an ubuntu derived distribution with this feature taken out by default and distributing it.
http://michaelsmith.id.au
No, not really... If you use ANY mainstream ISP they are already logging your requests for marketing purposes... Just not specifically about "you". That was the deal with DNS being hijacked... It's not like they don't still do it. The guy that owns your "wire" has 100% of the info you send.
If I want you to know what I'm doing Ill tell you otherwise mind your own fucking business.
Is that what you tell the clerk at the grocery store? You just expect everyone you meet to become an amnesiac after you're done talking to them?
Don't mistake my post as an argument in favor of tracking everything you do. I'm just pointing out that this is the world we live in: things get logged. Governments can compel people to produce logs. Ergo, online activities are discoverable by governments and if you don't want that, you must avoid using online services.
Would you care to enlighten me?
I don't agree with this. Just to make things clear, I use mainly Debian and only occasionally play with Kubuntu.
...
As other people pointed out, there are several Ubuntu derivatives that give you pretty much all of the benefits you get with Big-U without all the mess (Unity or whatever Lens they put on top of it...). And for what matters, I think Kubuntu itself is really well-made, with great care of details and usability.
I don't like Ubuntu, but all its merits must be recognized: it positively influenced the world of distros by stressing that style and identity are as much important as the programs you provide (totally different scenario than Apple); it proofed the idea started pushing the idea that Linux can be a viable alternative in the Grown Ups market and you can sell a computer without Windows.
It wasn't the only player, for sure, but Ubuntu moves contributed (directly or indirectly) to make Linux a less fuzzy target, maybe influencing other moves (did I think about Valve?).
Let's see, for the common user:
- Debian couldn't be enough (questionable, in recent times, but let's keep it...)
- Ubuntu is too much (bad bad Unity, desktop invasion, etc...)
- Ubuntu-derivatives (more usable desktop, no crazy marketing $h1t
-
- Profit
It's a bit unfair to too mention Ubuntu and Gentoo in the same sentence considering the topic. Leave Gentoo alone, what have they ever done wrong?
Or is it that you found the install too hard...
what did gentoo do wrong? well, for starters they created a bunch of users who now think that their browser is faster because it doesn't have support for ps/2 mouses..
world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
I don't know about RMS, but Torvalds? He's been known to use four-letter words to describe the things he don't like. As far as online reputations go, Torvalds sounds like a nicer person in person, but he tends to use more abrasive language than RMS, who mostly reserves his online rants to describing congressmen as "congress critters", stuff that he posts on his "personal" web site.
Read the stuff though that he's posted on the official FSF sites. They're more well-thought out than anything Torvalds has written, since, well, Torvalds, as a self-confessed pragmatist, tends not to take official positions on anything. Torvalds himself admits, no, he's proud of the fact that he has NO vision as a software godfather. Which isn't necessarily a bad "position" to take. If you believe that like life on Earth, software should evolve, free from ideological design.
Does anybody actually use the Unity interface? All I've every heard about it is negative, and it's easily replaced e.g., with Gnome 3. That's part of my standard procedure for installing Ubuntu, since I also find Unity unusable.
If nobody uses it, there's no need to be concerned about its features.
The truth is that everybody likes privacy, but shits like Schmidt will say anything to convince people to give up their rights so that they can be exploited. Don't drink the cool-aid.
Comments like these hold Linux back in the dark ages. "Compile it yourself, roll a new distribution, the command line is all you need, you only need to edit ten thousand configuration files to do things that can be done with a click elsewhere, RTFM, google it, go to IRC for help..." and the litany of other so-called solutions simply aren't acceptable if Linux adoption is to proceed beyond a tiny minority of ubergeeks. The very same people who are most vehement in the superiority of Linux are the same ones championing these sorts of solutions that ensure that many who would otherwise be able to have a better computing experience on Linux will never adopt because of foolish barriers set by arrogance, rather than technology.
As I said before, Ubuntu is more or less the "face" of desktop Linux. The "Gateway" distribution, with a desktop user focus and a variety of comprehensive paid and free support avenues of quality. Canonical making foolish decisions like this harms the entire Linux community. Linux has a chance to capitalize on the kind of momentum that has been built on the snowballing of having Ubuntu bring users to desktop linux, which brings further developers to work on Linux software and bring previously Win/OSX software to Linux as a worthwhile destination. Decisions like this slow that momentum. Like it or not, Ubuntu is pivotal due to its current position in the community. Gradually over time there may be a transition to another distro as a "face" of the Linux desktop user experience, (ie Mint is a good example) but unless it happens through organic growth, it will negatively affect user experience and thus Linux adoption. Its one thing for someone to have a good experience on Ubuntu, learning the basics there, and deciding they want to learn more/try something new etc... and switching to another distro. Its another thing entirely for them to have a neutral or poor experience; they will be unlikely to give another distribution a try and will go back to Windows or Mac.
I don't think its too much to ask for Canonical to give users a choice before embedding referral/affiliate links and to ensure good security practices by allowing users to choose exactly what, where, and how their OS's built in desktop search operates. Opt-in is the only ethical, logical choice - doubly so for an OS that makes "Freedom" one of its core values.
I
The shopping lens will pass every search string you make using the default search box onto canoncial who will then pass it on to amazon (supposedly anomymized) or whoever else they decide they want to in the future.
I.e. if you search for something on your local computer, using your local machine to do the search, you would normally expect that search to remain local, but you now have to take extra steps to ensure that an offline search remains offline.
The point I suggested you missed is that line between online and offline is not as well defined as it should be and so its not just a case of choosing to not do stuff online.
These comments are my personal opinions and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the other voices in my head.
People that want their parcels to actually make it to their homes, because they ordered stuff. People that don't take the trouble to erase all cookies, log out of facebook and whatnot before they start messing up reviews with fake entries. There are so much things identifying you online that once they have your real data, they'll follow you regardless of the amount of bogus you fill in, unless you simply don't order online and don't do any social networking, use search engines and such.
I was promised a flying car. Where is my flying car?
Do you mean that he is living on unemployment benefits?
- Raynet --> .
The FSF also has/had its own Debian/Ubuntu-derived distro, gNewSense (basically, Debian without anything the FSF considers non-free, I think).
Afaik it also adds stuff that Debian considers non-free (GFDL docs with invariant sections).
what did gentoo do wrong? well, for starters they created a bunch of users who now think that their browser is faster because it doesn't have support for ps/2 mouses..
Mostly, these mythical users with a wrong understanding of optimization exist only in your head. This straw man is revived every time there's an opportunity to snipe at Gentoo. In reality, the vast majority of people who use Gentoo do so because of Portage and the vast potential for customization at every level, not speed. It's a great distro, as is Debian and Fedora. It's not what I recommend for Grandma, but Gentoo certainly has earned its place on the short list of great meta-distributions.
This author takes full ownership and responsibility for the unpopular opinions outlined above.
FSF doesn't use Debian - gNewSense is Ubuntu derived, but one of the 'libre-linux' distros, which they've stopped updating and are only maintaining. FSF has a list of approved distros, none of which are among the commonly heard of names, unless one is familiar w/ Trisquel, Blag, Dyne:bolic, Musix, et al.
you are funny, most Mint users are fleeing from Unity.
Unity is great for people who don't want to see more than one window at once, or only run one app, or are working on a giant tablet using their knees, elbows and forehead. The rest of us want the results of over two decades of UI improvement that continues to evolve, i.e. not Unity but one of the many polished alternatives.
why are people here still on about ubuntu then? .. well diminished value?
i wish someone could assure me mint is still the safe option for the paranoiac since ubuntu has definitely failed the mission completely (that paranoiac would be me), i'm referring to the free bit and the part where you dont just get spied on and sold out because you use something that cost you nothing
mission failure, game over
how about mint? any alternatives? anyone ? any of the seasoned vets care to share something about that i'd be much obliged, something as easy to use as ubuntu but without the added
any comments by people who know what they talk about would be very welcome, and i'm sure not just to this here lunatic
Free speech was meant to be free for all... how can anyone grow up in a nanny state ?