Originally posted by Jimmy
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Yahoo Pays Canonical, Now They're The Ubuntu Default
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An interesting note:
It's worth noting that Yahoo's data retention practices are more privacy-friendly than Google's. Yahoo search records are anonymized after 90 days, a practice that will continue in the future. Google, on the other hand, keeps the data for three times as long and has faced criticism for its allegedly inadequate anonymization.
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So in order to get a share of Ubuntu users' search revenue, Canonical Inc. will default existing and new users to Yahoo!?
Certainly Canonical Inc. is aware that Yahoo! has collaborated with eg. the Chinese regime and decent people are languishing in the regime's jails as a result. Yahoo's Chinese arm remains aggressively pro-regime and recently strongly attacked Google for siding with the users' rights.
Clearly Canonical's intent on getting a share of Ubuntu users' search revenue spoils trumps any consideration of human rights or common decency here.
Then there is the question of decency wrt. Mozilla's own revenue agreement with Google. Does simple very minor rebranding give Canonical the right to deny Mozilla their development revenue??
Finally there's the little issue of user experience. People are using Google search for a reason and the Mozilla default option has not been controversial. Especially for users of open source software Google seems very unbiased towards proprietary, let alone Microsoft's proprietary search results.
Yahoo!Bing?
For me Canonical's slippery slope came apparent when they decided to integrate Canonical's proprietary Cloud service, even deceptively named Ubuntu One (as if it was part of the great humane open-source effort), into Ubuntu Linux.
Are these compromises really necessary just so that Canonical can employ a couple of more developers to work on canonical projects?
Are the users' representatives in the Ubuntu Community council all "company guys"?
(Apologies if you're seeing a dup. Submitted this opinion to LinuxToday as well)
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Certainly Canonical Inc. is aware that Yahoo! has collaborated with eg. the Chinese regime and decent people are languishing in the regime's jails as a result. Yahoo's Chinese arm remains aggressively pro-regime and recently strongly attacked Google for siding with the users' rights.
Changing the default search engine is two clicks away (literally), so just change it if you don't like it.
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Originally posted by BlackStar View PostAnd Google hasn't?
Collaborated with the Chinese dictatorship?
AFAIK the extent has been limited to censoring search results according to the Chinese Communist Party's whims (democracy, Tiananmen massacre, human rights, corruption, Tibet etc.) while informing the Chinese users that the results have been tampered with by the Party. Yahoo or MS-Bing never disclose what has been banned.
Google has refused to give the Chinese regime access to users' data, which is why they were targeted for spying and which is why they - unlike the other businesses which fully support the Chinese regime's information controls - actually spoke out.
Changing the default search engine is two clicks away (literally), so just change it if you don't like it.
The previous arguments still stand. This is a fishy deal and done purely for dollars versus the users' expectations and experience, and against Mozilla who are unequivocally a far more important player for open source and software freedom than Canonical's rebadged Debian (although Ubuntu did initially start out by making all the right noises).
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Originally posted by hanglekuk View PostThe question is how often you try other search engines? This is the Yahoo chance to show that maybe they are not that hopeless. I'm willing to give em a try. Would be lazy to do otherwise. And if it helps Yahoo to survive longer I see it as a very positive thing.
Some history: Yahoo->Altavista, then Yahoo->Google, then Yahoo->Altavista as an acquisition, and now Yahoo->Bing. Talk about a roller coaster.
Altavista was good when there was no Google.
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Originally posted by misGnomer View PostSo in order to get a share of Ubuntu users' search revenue, Canonical Inc. will default existing and new users to Yahoo!?
Certainly Canonical Inc. is aware that Yahoo! has collaborated with eg. the Chinese regime and decent people are languishing in the regime's jails as a result. Yahoo's Chinese arm remains aggressively pro-regime and recently strongly attacked Google for siding with the users' rights.
Clearly Canonical's intent on getting a share of Ubuntu users' search revenue spoils trumps any consideration of human rights or common decency here.
Then there is the question of decency wrt. Mozilla's own revenue agreement with Google. Does simple very minor rebranding give Canonical the right to deny Mozilla their development revenue??
Finally there's the little issue of user experience. People are using Google search for a reason and the Mozilla default option has not been controversial. Especially for users of open source software Google seems very unbiased towards proprietary, let alone Microsoft's proprietary search results.
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