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What??? For realsies???
35 0 ReplyThis is the "ad". Personally, I don't think a little plug like this is worth any kind of fuss. If it were a real ad or something, then yea I would get it.
135 0 ReplyAn ad is an ad and this definitely is an ad. This is the kind of shit that made me quit Windows and it would make me quit Ubuntu if I was using it.
135 0 ReplyThis. Any unsollicited communication that's meant to make you investigate or buy a commercial product is an advertisement. That's all. Is it less intrusive than the TikTok ad in Windows start menu, I think it may be, but it's still an advertisement, by definition.
67 0 ReplyIs it less intrusive
For me it is, I would've never ever expected an ad on cli, on a local install, on my machine.
Logged into an ec2 and see an advert? Sure. But not on my own shit. It's a true "ah fuck I can't believe you've done this" factor.
7 0 ReplyUbuntu Pro seems to be free for regular users (on up to five machines).
Would bother me a lot more if it wasn't a free service. Now it's ehh
6 0 ReplyAs I mentioned in another comment, it's still a commercial offering, that happens to have a free tier. Would we be okay with a YouTube link in the same spot?
Honestly, it doesn't bother me that much. It's more that you can see a more and more corporate-y trend in Canonical's decision making, which I personally don't really care for. If I used Ubuntu with the default shell I'd probably just override the MOTD and go on with my life.
14 0 ReplyWould we be okay with a YouTube link in the same spot?
Like, promoting Youtube or just a link to a Youtube video promoting Ubuntu Pro or what do you mean?
3 0 ReplyA link promoting any other commercial product with a free tier. Like AWS, or YouTube.
7 0 ReplyI wouldn't be really bothered if Google promoted Youtube in their product. I'd expect it, really.
1 0 Reply
I think this is the best take. This alone if it went nowhere is fairly harmless.
But I think we know what it really is, is the start of a slippery slope.
11 0 ReplyDifferent strokes and all that. I'm personally ok with the way this is done, but I can also see why people wouldn't like it at all
7 0 ReplyI use Ubuntu and I haven’t seen ads in the terminal.
But I see everyone complaining about them.
What am I missing here?
2 0 Reply
While I'm not bothered by this in particular, like other people have said, it feels like the top of a very slippery slope that I would be bothered by
50 0 ReplyThat's pretty much how I feel about it. This specific method is alright by me, but it could very easily become something intrusive.
13 0 Reply
It is a real ad though...
40 0 ReplyTechnically, but it's coming from the same servers your packages are being downloaded from, right?
6 0 ReplyI don't think that's from a server but instead it's baked into apt. Or some post-install trigger.
5 0 ReplyPost-install trigger was my guess.. I used to have to build .rpm's unfortunately but no apt experience yet.
3 0 Reply
Yeah, plus given you can get pro for free it really seems more like a announcement than an ad. Slippery slope though.
21 0 ReplyWhat's an ad if not a commercial announcement?
13 0 ReplyI guess it doesn't seem as much of an ad if it's something free they're promoting. As it would be for most users.
3 0 ReplyIt's a commercial offering with a free tier.
7 0 ReplyYes and most users would be in the free tier
2 0 ReplySo it's still an ad to a product, or it's not?
5 0 ReplyI guess it doesn't seem as much of an ad if it's something free they're promoting. As it would be for most users.
1 0 Reply
this plus the snap crap they've been doing was enough for me to switch to Debian
20 0 ReplyI went through the entire cycle.
- Ubuntu
- Pop_OS!
- Mint
- Manjaro
- Arch
- Fedora
And finally I’m at Debian.
6 0 ReplyYou missed Slackware
5 0 ReplyAnd he still hasn't arrived at Gentoo.
2 0 ReplyHe's still compiling
1 0 Reply
Did you just tell us that you did in fact use Arch?
1 0 ReplyI once used Arch, but I decided to go to Debian as it is stable.
1 0 Reply
I've been getting ads like these for years on my ubuntu server.
n additional security updates can be applied with ESM Apps. Learn more about enabling ESM Apps service at https://ubuntu.com/esm
This is on a machine running 20.04. Never bothered me. All my other machines are Debian now, and at some point I'll switch that one too.
18 0 ReplyYeah, this isn't that bad. It's just a suggestion after running an apt upgrade. NPM has similar plugs which I don't find too annoying.
In fact its not even as intrusive as NPM's funding requests, as it is only 2 lines of text, plus it looks like Ubuntu Pro is free for personal use.
12 0 ReplyThis is not what I would consider an ad. I also remember seeing it only once
11 0 ReplyI mean.. It is literally an ad. I don't see how you could not consider it one. You could claim it doesn't bother you or isn't too intrusive or something, but it most certainly is an ad.
7 0 ReplyI agree that it's not a very intrusive ad
1 0 Reply
I agree that I wouldnt call that an ad, but it's a pretty distasteful plug
9 0 ReplyI see a lot of people comment that this isn’t that bad and that it might even be acceptable, and that’s exactly the problem here: it’s a gateway drug and if we normalise this, Canonical will keep pushing the limits of what they can pull off before it’s not acceptable anymore, and that sounds when it’s too late.
8 0 ReplyI have never seen this ever
2 0 Reply
Haven't kept up with Ubuntu, but I believe this. It's in line with Canonical's behavior. They are very corporaty
15 0 Reply