EFF Wants Ubuntu To Disable Online Search By Default 124
sfcrazy writes "Ubuntu 12.10 met with some controversy before and after its launch about the inclusion of Amazon product listings alongside local search results. Now, the Electronic Frontier Foundation has raised concerns around data leaks and Amazon Ads. The EFF has asked Canonical to update Ubuntu so it disables 'Include online search results' by default. 'Users should be able to install Ubuntu and immediately start using it without having to worry about leaking search queries or sending potentially private information to third party companies. Since many users might find this feature useful, consider displaying a dialog the first time a user logs in that asks if they would like to opt-in.'"
Good Advice (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Good Advice (Score:5, Insightful)
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Nobody protests Amazon being included in the search bar in Firefox because nobody uses Firefox to search for local data. Local and remote searching should have a good clear line between them. It should take an active effort on the users part to merge them.
Is there any reason for this except "this is how we've always done it"?
Re:Good Advice (Score:4, Insightful)
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If Canonical announced tomorrow "We are going broke, either we have the Amazon search or we close our doors" which would you choose?
Buh-bye, Canonical. I will slightly miss your driver integration.
Frankly most of the improvements on usability on the desktop can be traced back to Canonical
Citation needed. There was a working desktop before they were around, and the only thing I have now that I didn't have before them is more eye candy, at the expense of functionality like expecting my computer to run OpenGL programs correctly.
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Question: If Canonical announced tomorrow "We are going broke, either we have the Amazon search or we close our doors" which would you choose?
Close the fucking doors! Canonical isn't the only one providing distros.
Frankly most of the improvements on usability on the desktop can be traced back to Canonical
Such as? Unity? haven't tried it but I heard it sucked. Gnome improvements? I never liked Gnome. I'm running kubuntu, but if Canonical wnt out of business I'd just switch back to Mandriva. So what useabilit
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Yeah Bob writes a feature, that fucks up previous releases, breaks shit left and right, and when you point this out? You'll get told "fix it yourself".
You submit a bug report and reinstall the previous version. Simple. A housecat could do it.
There is a REASON why the ONLY time Linux gained shit was when Google just took the whole damned thing away from the devs
If by "shit" you mean "market share," that's one of the biggest reasons why Linux isn't going to dominate the desktop. People not onlty don't know th
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Please enjoy this list of show stopping bugs
Firewalled off here, but if all you can link to is a personal page, your argument is pretty damned weak. I'll have a look at it when I get home, but I've run across no "show stoppers".
Meanwhile the rest of us can run brand new and decade old software, hell you ca
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From your G+ link: " The typical update latency for an app is weeks for security fixes (sometimes months) and months (sometimes years) for major features."
Yet doesn't list a single one. The he goes on to say "What did the (mostly closed source) competition do? It went into the exact opposite direction"
WTF? This is a fairy tale. The guy is either an apple fanboy or an MS shill. Don' tbelieve everything you read!
The other link is almost as bad. "The kernel cannot recover from video, sound and network drivers'
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Question: If Canonical announced tomorrow "We are going broke, either we have the Amazon search or we close our doors" which would you choose? Frankly most of the improvements on usability on the desktop can be traced back to Canonical and like it or not if they go under there is nobody lining up to take their place.
IMO the Unix "desktop" was good enough for average users in 1992 or so, so I'd choose a world without Canonical. I don't quite understand what these usability features *are*, anyway. I have to use Windows at work, and see nothing remarkably usable there. Keymap switching is nice, but everything else is comparable with my plain X11 desktop.
Of course, now someone will name me "part of the problem", mutter things about "the year of the Linux desktop" and so on ...
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Is there any reason for this except "this is how we've always done it"?
I'm surprised you even need to ask this. You seem really out of touch.
Online searches leak private information. Online search inclusion drastically lowers the quality of local searches in large part because online searches are polluted with "shopping information" and local searches are never about shopping. Online searches are usually slower than local searches, Online searches can cause huge delays if the machine is off-line. Online
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Online searches are usually slower than local searches
Are you kidding me?
With an online search, there are servers waiting to perform my search and are optimized to do it. Google throws me 10 results in well under a second.
My local machine is not optimized to do searches of local content, nor do I want it to dedicate the kind of RAM it takes to do fast local searches. My local machine takes longer than a Google search just to get a a set of uncached icons onto the screen because its got to hit the platter.
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Is there any reason for this except "this is how we've always done it"?
Yes. Privacy!
Re:Good Advice (Score:5, Insightful)
If Canonical had asked "Support Ubuntu by including Amazon searches?" they could have kept the money and the goodwill.
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I think the problem for Canonical would be that Amazon would pay them more money for "default on" local ad searches, and they do need money for paying (at least some) developers, and for servers and other stuff.
I'll be honest here and say I don't see a problem with it- it is open source and can be easily removed, unlike apps on some mobile operating systems added by the telecoms companies.
Ultimately the money must come from somewhere. For Suse (my main OS) and redhat it mainly comes from server side support
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Canonical is a privately held company. It has no legal obligation to "make more money" as you put it. Where you see this as a money grab others are seeing it as a convenient feature.
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I completely agree with the EFF, but I hope they're not suggesting a modal dialog. Modal dialogs get in the way. Give us a way to turn on internet search one time only, or give us a way to turn it on by default, but (aside from placing it in the control panel) ask us about that particular setting when we've just made an unsuccessful query.
Windows 8 (Score:1, Interesting)
Windows 8 interface formerly known as Metro is leaking local searches like a mofo also.
Why should every thing i search locally be shared with the maker of every service and app I subscribe to?
It's batshit insane IMO but at this stage to be expected from the likes of Microsoft, Apple, Google, but Ubuntu?!?!?!!!!!!
Me: "makes me sick motherfucker, how far we done fell"
Shuttleworth: *ahhhhhhhauccccccccccck *Phlew!
http://youtu.be/1wmgghlEagA?t=3m36s
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It does? You must be using a different version of Windows 8 than I am because my version only searches the currently selected app in the sidebar. I wish it had a smarter search feature.
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Now expect them to become slutty overnight.
Honestly (Score:1)
I think you misspelled "everybody" (Score:1, Insightful)
Useless (Score:5, Funny)
Every time I search for "tentacle rape furry herm hentai" I get zero results from Amazon anyway.
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Remove your furry herms and Amazon will provide.
Re:Useless (Score:5, Informative)
> Every time I search for "tentacle rape furry herm hentai" I get
> zero results from Amazon anyway.
Try amazon.jp...
Ah... I wish I was joking.
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I always knew there was something creepy about Dragon Quest.
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Wow. You know you went to a weird place when "Tentacle Fuck Bundle only ¥300" is an on-topic reply to anything you wrote...
Someone has to pay (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Someone has to pay (Score:4, Interesting)
So why not be nice back and let them have some small Amazon affiliate income? If that's what it takes to keep Ubuntu running, it's fine by me.
I totally agree.
Also Maintaining bash is a lot of work, if sending all ur commands to a small Amazon affiliate is what it takes to keep bash up to date, its fine by me.
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Besides, they were doing just fine on their previous funding models, which is what other companies like Red Hat do, right? Why do they need more money? Is the support license money well running dry these days? And if that is the case, whose
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Is the EEF jumping on every other manufacture who SELL Windows with similar crapware?
With a free OS it's not so much to for them to ask for some ad revenue, which can be turned off.
Here's a Thought: (Score:1)
Yea, I know - what a far-fetched concept, huh?
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OMG that's so innovative. Did you think up that bright idea yourself, or maybe WAS IT IN THE FUCKING SUMMARY?
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...Since many users might find this feature useful, consider displaying a dialog the first time a user logs in that asks if they would like to opt-in.'
How is this different than the suggestion in the summary to default to no and ask the first time you log in?
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...Since many users might find this feature useful, consider displaying a dialog the first time a user logs in that asks if they would like to opt-in.'
How is this different than the suggestion in the summary to default to no and ask the first time you log in?
It's different in that first login comes after the installation process.
Not that it's a bad idea - I must've missed that sentence when skimming the summary... rant partially retracted.
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I wasn't trying to ask for the literal difference...
That said, I prefer the idea of defaulting things like this to something sane and asking you on login if you want to opt-in versus putting more options in the installation process.
EFF's suggestions (Score:4, Informative)
Really if Ubuntu had implemented these suggestions to begin with, they could have avoided this controversy.
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As a Mac user I can't say I'm used to that. I monitor all firewall requests from my machine. What I can't stand is not knowing what it means to allow Flash or MS Word to autoupdate.
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Ubuntu is popular, people would find some way to bitch about it regardless.
Not even Microsoft or Apple (Score:2)
could put so much evil in their OS!
Eclipse - the IDE not the movie (Score:5, Interesting)
Yes, this inclusion into the Dash has gone a bit to far.
I upgraded a machine over the weekend to 12.10, and after a couple of installs of my various packages I like, I went to Unity Dash to search for "Eclipse" to see if I'd already installed the Java IDE or not.
Instead of simply saying "no", it instead gave me returns for all sorts of Twilight movies and books. Amazon probably has it on my wish list already.
I'll search Amazon when I want to search Amazon. When Dash is now the way to launch programs on my box instead of menus, I want it to launch programs.
--Lance
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I don't mind it searching Amazon, however posting Amazon searches in full view unless entirely disabled is moronic.
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(N)eubuntu (Score:2)
With (N)eubuntu, anyone can contribute to open-source.
Install now to begin clicking bubbles and sharing your information with other interesting entities right away!
Once you have the (N)eubuntu Experience©, you'll wonder why the hell you ever considered Linux!
I hope Canonical pays some attention to this story (Score:1)
Accepting a small chunk of money from Amazon in exchange for promotion (big, shiny, opt-in dialogue with a "remind me later" option) will keep the respect and support of quite a lot of the community.
Accepting a large chunk of money to allow Amazon to effectively spy on the majority of users (desktop search queries sent to Amazon by default) is outright despicable and will many to actively disrecommend Ubuntu.
Amazon+Ubuntu? (Score:2)
Actually I wonder how much Mark Shuttleworth would get if he sold Ubuntu to Amazon. And I wonder if he is wondering the same thing.
enhancement request (Score:5, Funny)
Some ubuntu users feel that this amazon search functionality should be expanded to other applications as well. For example grep search results should include amazon search results.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/gnome-terminal/+bug/1055766 [launchpad.net]
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Dear "root owning" overlords, :-)
When using grep recursively I only get local results:
[...]
I declare this a bug for two reasons:
1. The output is boring.
2. The terminal has more than 2 lines!!! It's an unefficient use of my screenspace.
I believe the reason for this is that the grep command only searches locally for things I am actually looking for, I kind of expect the results I get from my codebase and as such it removes any sense of mystery or something new and exciting to spice up my dull geek existence. That's boring, grep -R should also search amazon, so I get more exciting results such as:
Shark Season 1 Starring Steven Eckholdt, Nora Dunn, Patrick Fabian, et al. Amazon Instant Video to buy episodes: $1.99 to buy season: $34.99 ($1.59 per episode)
[...]
Please can you change the grep warez to have this feature, and just install it on my machine while I'm down the pub, after all you do "erm, have root", so it should be easy for you to do
[...]
Sent from my Unity device, (which is why it took several glacial ages and a couple of eras to get it done)
Mint (Score:3)
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try using Luninux. Its Mint for apple users.
Once, there was a time ... (Score:2)
when linux distros had very restrictive defaults.
Installed firefox on windows? Cookies allowed, no warning, everything open to tracking but for easy use, too.
Installed firefox on debian? First form you fill, you are asked "do you really want to submit data over unsecured connection?". Cookies? the default was "ask". Other insecure functions? often turned off, so using insecure functionality was opt-in.
Nice hypocrisy (Score:2)
Apparently the EFF wants you to open your wifi to everyone and anyone because it will promote privacy (how, they never explain), but when a free operating system enables searching the internet by default, apparently that's a no no because it might leach personal information.
Way to be a hypocrite EFF.
Opera has a similar nasty bug... (Score:1)
Opera has a similar nasty bug... If you middle-click almost anywhere within the browser window, it likes to take the last bit of text you highlighted with your mouse and send it to Google. It's wonderful when you're simply trying to middle-click a link to open it in a new tab, but you're off by a pixel and so instead Opera sends some secret text you didn't want anyone else to see to Google so that it can store it forever in its database of every search query ever submitted.
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Excuse me - but you need to learn how to configure and setup your web browser.
I have set DuckDuckGo as my default search engine in Opera.
If you don't already have DDG (quite unlikely, but who knowsâ¦), it's even easier, actually: go to DuckDuckGo, right click on their search box (not the Opera search box, the DDG website search box) and click Create Search. Enter d for keyword (you can choose any, but that's the way DDG suggests, and that's how it is on my default Opera installation), and check use as default search engine.
http://my.opera.com/Tamil/blog/default-search-engine [opera.com]
My problem isn't that it's Google, but that... (Score:1)
My problem isn't that it's Google, but that it's anything at all. (And I already use DuckDuckGo, BTW.)
Pasting into the browser window isn't a good enough reason to send that data over the internet. If I paste it into the URL bar, then perhaps parse it as a URL. If I paste it into the search bar, then send it as a search query. However, Opera goes so far as to take data pasted anywhere where it otherwise wouldn't do something else, and send it to Google as a search query. I sent them a bug report about
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My problem isn't that it's Google, but that it's anything at all.
ok - sorry - gotcha.
Still, the default should be a conservative "F NO" (Score:4, Insightful)
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There should be NO default.
Show a dialog with no default option, and force the use to choose. No "Next->Next->Finish".
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The problem is users using the search to try and find something local & then getting a bunch of amazon results alongside their files. Not very Linux like at all.
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The EFF are the vegans of technology. A little extremist at times but healthy nontheless.
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The problem is users using the search to try and find something local
The problem is a UI that co-mixes local searches with internet searches.
If you use a normal, non-UI command like 'find' to do local searches, there is no issue.
Re:Hmmm (Score:4, Insightful)
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"...but I would expect most Linux users to know that and make an informed decision."
Typically true, but it should make a difference that Ubuntu isn't targeting the average Linux user (IMHO). They are targeting everyday users as well by trying to make their interface as easy to use as possible.
As much as I'd like to think otherwise, let's be realistic. Very, very few 'everyday users' are installing Linux. They'll use what they get on their Mac or PC.
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Re:Hmmm (Score:4, Interesting)
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I wouldn't know. I've never used any version of Windows more recent than XP (and only use it to play a few games on at a club I belong to) and I don't use Ubuntu. I do, however, do support for my sister who used Ubuntu until she got tired of fighting with the Unity DE and switched to Xubuntu. As I wrote, that was my impression of Ubuntu and I won't insist on it if you feel like disagreeing.
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I don't think there are many Windows refugees currently. 2000 was ok, XP was a slight improvement. Vista was a disaster* because of being installed on systems not able to cope with it. 7 was basically a success, as far as I can see. We'll wait and see with 8.
I run Windows for games. If steam managed to switch it's catalogue to Linux now, I'd switch now. It's mostly a company problem now, and I hope Steam win, because It'll result in free operating systems in my opinion. Of course, that will be at the
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That being said - my current uptime is 1826 hours with Vista.
That's two and a half months, how do you get away from reboots on Patch Tuesday? Just ignore it and not update?
I've learnt to accept the less bad DRM as a part of life
That makes you part of the problem.
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I believe you'll find Mint took over the top spot when Ubuntu began pushing Unity on everyone.
Re:Hmmm (Score:4, Informative)
He's probably referring to the fact that Mint has been getting more pageviews on DistroWatch than Ubuntu for some time now. I'm certain Ubuntu still has more actual users.
That said, I had a friend inquire about Linux recently and I recommended Mint to them over Ubuntu because of this advertising injection. I use KDE so the Unity thing wasn't a big deal to me, but I can't excuse the ads/infomining. That's not what Linux is about.
Re:Hmmm (Score:4, Interesting)
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Very nice response. Much nicer than deserved. First off, the snarky "How about users just get a clue? Online search is a feature, not a bug. Yes it can 'leak' data, but I would expect most Linux users to know that and make an informed decision" is typically what I expect from some of the assholes who have been using Linux. They are socially retarded pinheads who's only accomplishment in life was staying up late staining their teeth with Cheetos and Jolt cola figuring out how to use a free distro because the
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First off, the snarky "How about users just get a clue? Online search is a feature, not a bug. Yes it can 'leak' data, but I would expect most Linux users to know that and make an informed decision" isn't what I would expect from a hard-core Linux user. He's going to eschew any distro that did that.
They are socially retarded pinheads who's only accomplishment in life was staying up late staining their teeth with Cheetos and Jolt cola figuring out how to use a free distro because they were too poor to buy a
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How about users just get a clue? Online search is a feature, not a bug. Yes it can 'leak' data, but I would expect most Linux users to know that and make an informed decision.
I would have to say it depends on the specifics of how it is implemented. For example when IE moved from a separate search box to demanding everything be done from a single URL bar there were some keyboard shortcuts that went with.
ctrl-e is supposed to send what you type to your search provider.
ctrl-l is supposed to be a URL but if you don't fully qualify with http it will *still* leak that to your search provider as well. I still find myself accidently doing it even though I know better.
The one ambiguous
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Hmmm (Score:4, Insightful)
Users should get a clue? What a charming view on users - I hope you're not a developer.
As a long-term Ubuntu user I have to say that I really want a clear separation between online search and local search. The last thing I want to see when searching through my files is an advertisement by some company. Not even as an opt-in.
(Apart from that general point, it should also be mentioned that Amazon sucks for a variety of good reasons.)
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From TFA:
"Windows and Mac users are used to having their data sent to third parties without their express consent by software companies that are trying to maximize profits for their shareholders."
C'mon, this is the EFF. Of course they would be critical of Microsoft, Apple, Google, et al. for leaking, or downright giving up users' data to third party entities. The article is hardly a slam, though...