I've alwys suspected the sort of thing the Snowden documents on PRISM,
etc prove. That's why I removed Unity when this issue came up. It was
replaced in my backup DE list with a Cairo-dock/Compiz session. For my
main DE I use Cinnamon, but Unity with all scopes removed MIGHT be safe.
Trouble is, for the sort of folks I distribute computers to I cannot
take a chance and cannot distribute an OS known to put local activity of
ANY type on a network.

I consider all online scopes to be a threat, as combining local with
online searches could enable the NSA over time to figure out  the
content of your filesystem. Also, if ever the NSA finds and exploits a
vulnerability in a scope, that would be an obvious target for
exploitation, as the dock already talks to the network, and already
lists files. Therefore, it is in the same category as installing a
webserver in a machine that will never be used as a webserver: unused
exploitable software that talks to the network. This does not require
any malicious intent by Canonical, only malicious intent by the NSA or
any other attacker.

Therefore, I now do not distribute Ubuntu's main distro. 12.04 and
earlier are safe but getting old fast-and if someone updates 12.04 to a
new version and does so with Ubuntu-Desktop installed I don't know if
they get the scopes. As of now, if not distributing my own private fork,
I give out either Mint or UbuntuStudio, the former with Cinnamon or
MATE, the latter with XFCE.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1054776

Title:
  Don't include remote searches in the home lens

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