** Package changed: apturl (Ubuntu) => software-center (Ubuntu)

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/793318

Title:
  Should confirm package conflicts from the user as apturl can silently
  uninstall vital packages like network-manager

Status in “apturl” package in Ubuntu:
  New
Status in “software-center” package in Ubuntu:
  New

Bug description:
  Binary package hint: apturl

  This happened on Ubuntu 10.04 upgraded from 8.10 and with latest
  updates applied.

     1. What you expected to happen

  The same as what happened, but without the inconvenience

     2. What actually happened

  In order to help Belgian people paying their income taxes, I reviewed, 
modified and tested
  http://doc.ubuntu-fr.org/tutoriel/utiliser_carte_identite_electronique_belge
  In the process, I uninstalled all the Belgian middleware *beid* as well as 
*pcsc* software.
  (Not pcsclite1 because network-manager depends on it)

  Then I clicked the following link on that page   
apt://pcscd,libpcsclite-dev,beidgui
  And this is what happened, taken from the APT logs.
  APTURL did not display what it was doing, even less ask the permission to do 
it:

  Start-Date: 2010-10-17  05:06:49
  Install: pcscd (1.5.3-1ubuntu4)
  Remove: libacr38ucontrol0 (1.7.10-1), network-manager (0.8-0ubuntu3), 
libgnokii5 (0.6.28.dfsg-1ubuntu0.1), ubuntu-desktop (1.197), 
network-manager-gnome (0.8-0ubuntu3), libpcsclite1 (1.5.3-1ubuntu4.1), 
gnome-phone-manager (0.65-1ubuntu2), libacr38u (1.7.10-1), wpasupplicant 
(0.6.9-3ubuntu3)
  End-Date: 2010-10-17  05:07:56

  Start-Date: 2010-10-17  07:05:14
  Remove: pcscd (1.5.3-1ubuntu4)
  End-Date: 2010-10-17  07:05:32

  Start-Date: 2010-10-17  07:34:37
  Remove: network-manager (0.8-0ubuntu3), network-manager-gnome (0.8-0ubuntu3), 
libpcsclite1 (1.5.3-1ubuntu4.1), wpasupplicant (0.6.9-3ubuntu3)
  End-Date: 2010-10-17  07:35:16

  The system must never uninstall the network-manager nor anything
  without asking the permission.

     3. The minimal series of steps necessary to make it happen, where
  step 1 is "start the program"

  1: "start the program"
  2: all of the above

  Conclusions:

  1 it's an extremely bad idea to make an installer (APTURL) behave silently 
and blindly.
  No detail of what is being done, no permission and even no indication that 
the operation is complete.
  I have seen that the Ubuntu Software Center operates the same silent, blind 
and dangerous way too.

  2 it looks like it's a bad idea to have each packet of the same
  aptline installed separately

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