With all due respect; Look up these phrases: "Taking the Blue Pill" and "Step Away From The Dark Side, Luke".
If you really want to help the developers, send them an email with system information. You then control exactly what info is added to their database (including your email...). You owe it to them to help prevent their own movement toward the "dark side".
Avoid allowing these pieces of software from sending data which they (not you) collect from your system. "Trust, but verify" - Ronald Reagen
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Canonical being silly again - Can this not be in Kubuntu, please?
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Originally posted by psymole View PostHi, I'm running Kubuntu 18.04, and I would like to OPT-IN to the data collection stuff. I know ubuntu propper has a dialogue on the first run. How would I got about doing that in Kubuntu
Code:sudo apt install ubuntu-report ubuntu-report
For sending weekly details of everything installed on your computer over an unsecure connection, click the checkbox shown in a screenshot on the previous page of this thread.
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Originally posted by psymole View PostHi, I'm running Kubuntu 18.04, and I would like to OPT-IN to the data collection stuff. I know ubuntu propper has a dialogue on the first run. How would I got about doing that in Kubuntu
https://www.howtogeek.com/349844/how...about-your-pc/
but I don't know how much of the info in that link applies to Kubuntu.
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Hi, I'm running Kubuntu 18.04, and I would like to OPT-IN to the data collection stuff. I know ubuntu propper has a dialogue on the first run. How would I got about doing that in Kubuntu
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Originally posted by Bings View PostNot putting bad software in the distro.
Problem avoided.
Plus you can only solve a problem if you know it's there.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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Here's the Ubuntu manpage for 12.04: http://manpages.ubuntu.com/manpages/...contest.8.html just to show it's been around awhile.
On my Kubuntu 16.04, I have /etc/popularity-contest.conf which I didn't bother to look at till now:
Code:# Config file for Debian's popularity-contest package. # # To change this file, use: # dpkg-reconfigure popularity-contest # # You can also edit it by hand, if you so choose. # # See /usr/share/popularity-contest/default.conf for more info # on the options. MY_HOSTID="08b2..." PARTICIPATE="no" USEHTTP="yes" DAY="1"
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Originally posted by chimak111 View Postpopcon is different than what the first post in the thread is about. popcon has been around for quite a few releases. I think popcon originated in Debian and is opt-in.
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popcon was one of the tools in the proposal. popcon=popularity contest.
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Originally posted by Bings View PostCode:popularity-contest/bionic,bionic,now 1.66ubuntu1 all [installed] Vote for your favourite packages automatically
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I was wrong, it is actually in there both ubuntu and kubuntu.
https://www.howtogeek.com/349844/how...about-your-pc/
The “popularity-contest” or “popcon” tool also is installed by default on Ubuntu 18.04. This tool reports to Ubuntu which software packages you have installed on your system. Ubuntu then knows exactly how popular each package is, and they can use this information to focus their development efforts.
Code:popularity-contest/bionic,bionic,now 1.66ubuntu1 all [installed] Vote for your favourite packages automatically
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Or, they could have installed a ubiquitously named daemon to run as root, undocumented, no man page, and not listed by any process id listing sofware. How many of us verify the source code before we compile our distro? I haven't verified or compiled source since I played with LFS, over 15 years ago. I've always run the binaries since I adopted Kubuntu & Neon.
But, given the nature and watchfulness of the FOSS community, I don't see how Ubuntu could hide such a program in their distro and have it evade detection.
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