Thank you very much for working on this.
One nit regarding the package long description: we should mention the
privacy implications of this package. My suggestion:
No user data is transmitted in the connectivity checks, but merely
contacting the Debian connectivity check servers reveals that the
Am 26.05.2017 um 17:31 schrieb Michael Biebl:
> Unless someone complains loudly, I intend to go ahead using the package
> name network-manager-config-connectivity-debian.
>
> The package will provide
> /usr/lib/NetworkManager/conf.d/20-connectivity-debian.conf
I pushed
https://anonscm.debian.org/
Hi there
On Mon, 10 Apr 2017 01:07:52 +0200 Michael Biebl wrote:
> Am 09.04.2017 um 14:47 schrieb Michael Biebl:
>
> > Fedora named this package NetworkManager-config-connectivity-fedora,
> > shipping /usr/lib/NetworkManager/conf.d/20-connectivity-fedora.conf. The
> > package is installed by d
On Sun, Apr 9, 2017 at 8:47 AM, Michael Biebl wrote:
> Afair, Ubuntu had/has similar plans. Jeremy, can you comment on that?
I proposed this for Ubuntu GNOME 17.04. There was interest in enabling
the connectivity check in the default Ubuntu install too, but there
wasn't enough time to handle this
Am 09.04.2017 um 14:47 schrieb Michael Biebl:
> This feature could be considered "phoning-home", so I'm a bit concerned
> in that regard indeed and do not want to enable it unconditionally and
> globally for everyone. If this config is shipped in a separate package,
> which can be installed (and u
[CCed the full message so Jeremy has all context]
Hi Michael
Am 09.04.2017 um 14:04 schrieb Michael Stapelberg:
>
> I recently noticed that NetworkManager as distributed by Debian does
> not do captive portal checks by default. I.e., when using an Airport
> WiFi (or similar), users are left in
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