On Tue, Aug 30, 2005 at 10:01:21AM +0200, Sven Ladegast wrote: > The idea isn't bad but lots of people could think that this is some kind > of home-phoning or spy software. I guess lots of people would turn this > feature off...and of course you can't enable it by default. But combined > with an automatic oops/panic/bug-report this would be _very_ useful I > think.
I think this is useful and would personally participate if it were a config tweak. There are a couple of issues that come to mind. 1. Possibly paranoia, but given the apparent numbers of people with malicious intent on the Internet and knowing that there are some financially motivated to make Linux kernel developers over confident in they're work, I'm not sure I'd trust or use the data unless it was somehow authenticated. 2. Some of us sit behind corporate firewalls and proxies that have oppressive rules that would have made Stalin proud. The solution must be proxy aware and if it used HTTP, even better because it's more likely to work anywhere. The proxy settings could also be a .config thing. 3. Again security; I haven't cleared this with my corporate superiors but I'm not sure they'll like the fact that anyone could intercept the data and compute how many people in the company are running Linux test kernels. I know this almost sounds anti-open but we're breaking them in slowly to the model and I don't think they are ready for this one just yet. :) -bryan - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/