Slashdot Mirror


Since-Pulled Cyanogen Update For Oneplus Changes Default Home Page To Bing

ourlovecanlastforeve writes: Nestled into GSMArena's report on the Cyanogen OS 12.1 update for Oneplus [ Note: an update that the story reports has since been pulled.] is this tasty bite: "...you'll find out that your Chrome homepage has been changed to Bing." Then it's casually dismissed with "Thankfully though, you can easily get rid of Microsoft's search engine by using Chrome settings." as if this were the most normal thing to have to do after an OTA update. Is this the new normal? Has Microsoft set a new precedent that it's okay to expect users to have to go searching through every setting and proactively monitor network traffic to make sure their data isn't being stolen, modified or otherwise manipulated?

14 of 87 comments (clear)

  1. There's an obvious solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Hosts files. With 64-bit compatible appropriate hosts file management tools we could prevent the phone from ever connecting to Bing. I think we should hear APK hosts file guy's thoughts about this issue.

  2. Cyanogenmod has gone downhill a bit by Lawrence_Bird · · Score: 2

    As another example, in late June they promised final snapshot images of CM11 for all devices. Yet relatively few actually got an update while their build system continued to churn out nightlies. Comments on the original blog post are ignored. Sure we all know it is free but don't promise people something if you have no intention of delivering on it.

    1. Re:Cyanogenmod has gone downhill a bit by Mazhe · · Score: 2

      Hell, not even counting the number of devices never updated to CM9... So much for expecting to have a longer phone support through CM, they can be as bad as phone sellers.

    2. Re:Cyanogenmod has gone downhill a bit by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

      [...] they can be as bad as phone sellers.

      Except that you never gave them money.

      Which makes you (well, me) wonder why they feel a need to lie.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    3. Re:Cyanogenmod has gone downhill a bit by c · · Score: 2

      So much for expecting to have a longer phone support through CM

      It's hit or miss...

      CM is pretty up-front about this; support for specific devices typically depends on a volunteer/champion who's willing to do the grunt work of testing and patching for that device. If that individual or team loses interest (or their devices croak or they just can't figure out how to work around critical bugs) and nobody is willing to step up and take over maintenance, the device can't be supported.

      Generally speaking, it seems that robust and popular devices get longer support, and devices with major flaws drop support sooner. That's happened to one of mine (the tf700t is a nice device with infuriatingly shitty I/O performance), while my other (purchased a year prior) still gets decent support with CM12.1.

      It's still better software support than what the manufacturer gives you.

      --
      Log in or piss off.
  3. Re:Troll is successful by LichtSpektren · · Score: 4, Interesting

    How is it trolling? What with the spyware that was quietly implemented in Windows 7 and 8.1, it's a perfectly legitimate question.

    My coworker had a problem recently with a bit of malware that kept changing Chrome's search engine to Bing whenever Chrome was installed. It was a bitch to remove it (it was nestled in some obscure registry, and I had to decompile the bastard to find out where). The kicker is that he got it off of a program that Microsoft recommended to him to open a certain file extension.

  4. Re:Troll is successful by lostmongoose · · Score: 4, Insightful

    google pays mozilla to be firefox frontpage for years = good microsoft pays oneplus for bing to be frontpage = new precedent that's how silly you sound...

    It's one thing to do it on a fresh install, it's another ENTIRELY to change my chosen settings in an update, even more so a setting that has NOTHING to do with how the OS functions or handles data. I can change my homepage in FF and it doesn't get reverted upon updating the software.

  5. What? by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 2

    Note: an update that the story reports has since been pulled.

    ...what?

    I know you don't take much care over the summaries in the first place, but you could at least make sure your ammendments make sense.

    --
    systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
  6. Serve your users by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    CyanogenMOD users are often of the hacker\tweaker variety. Android enthusiasts are often Google fans, but probably not Microsoft fans. Most of the hacker types I know HATE Microsoft as a residual feeling from their monopoly days. We didn't suddenly just start liking microsoft once they started losing.

    What brain damaged individual thought that Cyanogen users would be happy with Bing? Fuck Bing. No one is clammoring for Bing, least of all, hackers.

  7. Re:I like it. It's Subversive. by Rob+Y. · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This has nothing to do with whether Google has today's version of Microsoft's desktop monopoly (it doesn't, by the way). it has to do with silently changing a user preference. You might argue that a user doesn't want Google as the default search engine from the start - but if they're buying an Android device, at least they know the default search engine is Google - and they can change it. To quietly change the default without being asked is a whole other thing.

    Mozilla pulled this with its switch to Bing. It wasn't supposed to change the search engine for existing installations - but in some cases, it still did. I've even had it changed back to Bing after having switched it back to Google. Don't know if that happened in response to an update or what, but it's nasty.

    --
    Posted from my Android phone. Oh, I can change this? There, that's better...
  8. Cyanogen OS is NOT CyanogenMod !!! by itsme1234 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Yes, very confusing I know.

    Cyanogen OS is some kind of bastard commercial branch for OnePlus (and possibly for a few more phones).
    The updates are a complete disaster, not only that you can't just get to OnePlus and easily see what to install and what's the latest version.

    On the other hand the "normal" CyanogenMod you can get for your S5 or many other hundreds of phones is (usually) absolutely fine.

  9. Re:Troll is successful by Imazalil · · Score: 2

    It's trolling because it's not Microsoft sneaking into the Cyonagen offices at night and switching search engine providers on their builds. Cyanogen made a decision to use Bing as the default search engine (most certainly cash was involved), but it is still a decision Cyanogen made.

  10. Re: MS Needs SOME Return On Its Investment by Enigma2175 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Google set the precedent for preinstalled spyware. Microsoft, as always, just consolidated on the precedent set by another party. Apple is following along as well, of course.

    WTF are you talking about? MS was pre-installing adware and spyware on computers before Google was even a company.

    --

    Enigma

  11. Re:I like it. It's Subversive. by rudy_wayne · · Score: 2

    Google search is a natural monopoly as all other search engines that don't use google search return shit results

    The problem is that Google is starting to also return shit results.

    Starting to return shit results? Starting? Where have you been? People have been complaining about Google's shitty search results for at least 5 or 6 year, if not more.

    Problem is that the one that's missing is the key term that I'm searching for, and there's no way I've found to force it to include the term that Google has determined is irrelevant.

    Yes, that's the icing on the cake. Not only does Google ignore what you type, there is no way to make them search for what you actually want.

    As much as I hate all the SEO bullshit, I've learned some things from the SEO guys, one of the main things being that shitty search results are deliberate and by design, in the hope that you'll click on one of the paid ads in order to find what you want. Remember, 94% of Google's revenue comes from advertising.