when you’re the OS, they let you do it. you can do anything.
Grab 'em by the kernel.
When you know for sure a statement (or reality) makes it impossible for something to gain mass-market adoption
Thennnnn comes the general public
NSFW transcript of (the only) twice-impeached US president
https://www.nytimes.com/2016/10/08/us/donald-trump-tape-transcript.html
This was pretty informative and shocking.
And then Chris Titus made this video
They literally record everything you do, at least if it is a “Copilot plus” PC with a “neural engine”.
For people who say you should read the contract before agreeing to it. What about the hundreds of thousands? No, millions of people buying new windows laptops every year. Are they presented with any kind of agreement? I don’t think so.
Oh they are when they first set up Windows
The same is happening with some of these new “smart” vehicles. Built-in software in these vehicles are the anti-thesis of freedom and privacy.
It’s like using edge to download a better browser but with extra steps.
They are. It is a huge problem that companies are allowed to do clickwrap bullshit with no human-comprehensible summary. But people are agreeing to this stuff.
Maybe I’m missing something, but what is the damage in this screenshot?
High background resource usage.
Ah, the light blue between the 2 lines is background usage? I wouldn’t know, I use Arch btw :3
Thanks for asking. I’m using Debian and didn’t know either. :p
I too have used arch btw. Currently using pop (deb) tho. I hop around from time to time.
how do you manage your system setup?
btw, moving from arch to pop is strange, you’re supposed to go Gentoo or NixOS or LFS…
Nix was my next plan lol. My last distro suddenly had some file system corruption problems mid week when I needed it, so I had to switch to something quick without much time for configuration. So I decided to go for a preconfigured distro.
My next plan is Nix when I have some time.
As for how I back stuff up for frequent distro hopping: Firefox login syncs my browser stuff and passwords, steam syncs my game save files, I backup my home folder to a USB once in a while so I don’t lose any local documents. I have private GitHub repos for some window manager, bar, etc configs I’ve made like sway, i3, polybar, awesomewm, etc., that I use when switching to more barebones distros.
nah i don’t care that you’re using windows who the fuck still uses eclipse
Eclipse is Free Software and as such it is valuable even if better commercial options exist.
Why not something else free? Geany, etc.?
I personally don’t use a full IDE, but KDE’s Kate.
I keep flip-flopping between Kate and pycharm community. I prefer Kate’s LSP access, but pycharm’s management of multiple projects is great.
I wish I could easily set up Kate so it would open random text documents in a separate session from my session that’s running a certain project. And I wish it were aware of whether a session is running on the same activity. (In fact what I’d really like is per-activity Kate sessions).
Trouble is, I’m not good enough at C++ to make a merge request for those features.
You guys are using graphical IDEs and text editors? I’ve been learning to program in neovim.
With 20+ years of using various Unix OS’s as my primary OS, I can say for sure that my answer to “vi or emacs?” is “neither.”
Tbh, it just fits my workflow better. I would find myself editing stuff in nano more so than something like vscode because navigation in a file browser gets a little clunky for me. So it seemed fitting to learn neovim. I find the features more of a nuisance than a benefit at this stage and I want to properly understand how to use the underlying technologies these programs extract away.
I typically know exactly what I’m looking for and if I need more help I could check something out like fuzzy find. Those search boxes on file browsers are hit and miss for me, especially with Dot files. I store my scripts in a folder called .scripts and I reference them alot while building my apps.
Actually most my apps start out as scripts because prototyping is easier when you don’t initially worry about UI or optimization and focus on the core functionality.
university students ?
Pretty funny how it says “Unauthorized access” right below screenshots of features clearly being enabled.
But in the end of the day, there is no intended way to turn off Telemetry fully.
Could airgap it, but then you’ve airgapped it…
or run windows in a VM
It knows it’s in a VM
Do you understand windows update is changing settings to defaults right? They are overriding user configured settings on this toggle. That is malware
Why the damage?
From my experience Windows have this system program called “CompatTelRunner.exe” that run silently in the background maybe once a month it’s send data to M$ and using a lot of CPU power while collecting data, now with Al being pushed to windows who knows what it could be doing in the background without user knowledge
“Windows malware” increasingly sounds like pleonasm
“Windows malware” increasingly sounds like Linux users wanking each other
you don’t have to browse linuxmemes
And Linux users don’t have to share their hate for Windows in all communities yet they do 🤷
90% of linuxmemes is people complaining about linux, lol. Which communities, specifically, are you seeing “linuxposting” in?
To be fair, the access is authorized
Authorized without consent. That is what Louis Rossmann calls a rapist mentality.
I agree with that dude’s takes but he rubs me the wrong way.
Users explicitly and willingly click on “I agree” to the Terms and Conditions. It might be undesirable, but it is consented
Yes and no. While you are legally in the clear, in practice no one read those because of the huge amount of legalese.
True consent is only obtainable if the person consenting understands what it means. Or else it’s just legal consent.
“just legal consent”… I mean sure, but you know how stupid most people are, right? There is no way to get the type of consent you want from them for any slightly complex topic.
Your point of view makes sense. In my opinion though, when you agree without reading the terms, you’re basically saying “you’re allowed to do whatever you want”
You are consenting, not with this or that, but with anything regarding that product, probably because you trust the company, or you don’t care enough
You do give consent. If you didn’t you wouldn’t be using Windows.
Say I buy a tomato. Tomato is sold to me as tomato, grown in a green house. It’s a good tomato.
I bring it home and I cut into it to make salsa and find a razor blade. I didn’t see any markings on the outside. I don’t know how it got there.
I go back to the store and say, “Dude, what the fuck is up with the razor blade?!”
They say, “Oh, we noticed a lot of people buying tomatoes to cut them so we decided to include a razor blade! You’re welcome!”
I say, “But I don’t want a razor blade. I just want the tomato!”
They say, “Oh…that’s too bad. We think you’ll really like the razer blade.”
I say, “I don’t care. I want a tomato without razor blades.”
They say, “ok. Just make sure you present this very specific, very distinct bar code to the check out person.”
I go and buy another tomato, present the barcode.
I bring it home and it has a different type of blade inside it.
I go back to the store and they say, “Well, you opted out of blade model a. This is blade model b.”
I consented to buy a tomato. Not to buy a razer blade.
I consented to install Windows OS, not fucking copilot, Cortana, Xbox central, etc.
I should have full control over my OS, regardless of who makes it. Even Ubuntu Linux had some sketchy adware that had to be removed (this was like Ubuntu 18 or something can’t remember).
True, I didn’t say it wasn’t a problem. I just said legally that’s how it works.
Most people are too tech illiterate to understand it all. I doubt people would agree to such a level of data collection, if they knew more about it. I believe it can be compared to making illiterate people sign a contract, when they can’t even read it.
Well they agreed to it. It isn’t a great reality but its the one we live in.
As if users understood anything related to their computer.
“Authorized” in the sense that even if I set all these options to No, a future Windows update will reset them and not tell me.
Authorized by not denying…
Yes.
This stuff affects the user experience too. I’ve been able to daily drive Linux at work for a few weeks now. Restarting and booting into windows, after being used to Linux on the same hardware, makes windows feel like the slow, cobbled together OS that you can get for free.
I mean, we’re a Microsoft 365 company like many others, but even things like Teams and Outlook feel more responsive in Firefox in Linux than in the native apps on windows. Even video conferencing works great.
This difference isn’t exactly new to me, and I’ve used Unix or Linux sporadically over the past couple decades. However, using it as my main work OS has really highlighted the differences. Hell, even the multi-monitor support is better!
And this is with Mint Cinnamon installed, not some cutting edge or lean & fast distro.
ITT: Libertarians advocating for corpos with rapist mentality calling it “consent”.
Sir, this is a Linux memes community
It is getting into the final form, after decades of progressive enmalwaretyfication
always been. In fact all proprietary program is a kind of malware.
Is it malware when the user allows it?
While there are ways to disable some aspects, most people don’t even know how to disable what they theoretically could.