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by natch
3378 days ago
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>Once you've run somebody else's binary, you're already conferring significant trust on them. This is the "you agreed to a date, that means you agreed to go all the way" argument. Even when a someone extends trust or tentative trust, that doesn't mean they should be expected to give up the right to maintain control of that choice at each successive moment in time. EFF strongly discourages auto updates that can't be turned off, because they can be used for enabling DRM and curtailing freedom. |
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If you remove it, and then try to run any Google Software, it will first lie to you and say that it needs you to authenticate so it can "function" properly. If you refuse, it will try to install it's code in ~/Library instead. If you intercept that, it will stop asking and work properly.
Google software does not depend on its updater in any way. There is no technical reason to keep asking you to install it. They just don't respect your agency. And if you say no to root installation, they will settle for just a user installation.
A lot of software that asks for authentication on first run is doing it solely to install it's helpers.
Not just is it creepy asf and wrong, but sometimes features will be removed or changed without my consent.
Software that was free when you downloaded it just got "upgraded" to shareware. Or maybe it just irreversibly converted all of its saved data to the new format that isn't backwards compatible.
You would never have agreed to install that update if you actually knew what it was going to do. That makes it dishonest.