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Is Minitube already bust in Buster?
Is Minitube already bust in Buster?
Does it work for anyone? I tried Minitube and the youtube videos miniatures start to appear on the left and continually flick down without stopping. So the solution would appear to be to build it oneself or use the ready-made deb from the upstream site.
DebianStable
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No non-free or contrib packages installed on debian! rms would be proud.
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Re: Is Minitube already bust in Buster?
spywarekedaha wrote:Does it work for anyone? I tried Minitube and the youtube videos miniatures start to appear on the left and continually flick down without stopping. So the solution would appear to be to build it oneself or use the ready-made deb from the upstream site.
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Re: Is Minitube already bust in Buster?
Anything to back up that assertion? Debian has spyware in the repository?theblueplll wrote:spywarekedaha wrote:Does it work for anyone? I tried Minitube and the youtube videos miniatures start to appear on the left and continually flick down without stopping. So the solution would appear to be to build it oneself or use the ready-made deb from the upstream site.
Sid has a newer 3.1 release that might work if it's backported. Backporting does not mean make a FrankenDebian--some newbies seem too eager to do that.
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Re: Is Minitube already bust in Buster?
Thanks, steve; the newer 3.1 release currently available in sid works fine; I made a quick backport for it the same way I did a good while back in wheezy as posted in my viewtopic.php?f=20&t=104399 Yes, better in principle to use the version backported from sid rather than using a package built from the upstream source.stevepusser wrote:Sid has a newer 3.1 release that might work if it's backported. Backporting does not mean make a FrankenDebian--some newbies seem too eager to do that.
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Re: Is Minitube already bust in Buster?
Yup just read the license agrement and privacy statement from the developers website.stevepusser wrote: Anything to back up that assertion? Debian has spyware in the repository?
Shouldn't surprise since KDE(data collection), and Gnome(geoloaction) is in the repo also read about those too.
PopularityContest(more data collection though you can opt out of this one)
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Re: Is Minitube already bust in Buster?
Let's say I'm very busy and don't have time to hunt for these statements if they don't have obvious links on the home page:
https://flavio.tordini.org/minitube
Can you provide links to the statements and where you think they say that they are spyware? If you are correct, then a bug report to that effect should be filed against the package.
Remember that Debian is providing the same Debian Google API key for every minitube package, the same as they do for Totem's Youtube feature, so you aren't giving up any data in that way.
https://flavio.tordini.org/minitube
Can you provide links to the statements and where you think they say that they are spyware? If you are correct, then a bug report to that effect should be filed against the package.
Remember that Debian is providing the same Debian Google API key for every minitube package, the same as they do for Totem's Youtube feature, so you aren't giving up any data in that way.
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Re: Is Minitube already bust in Buster?
I had a couple spare minutes, so set up minitube 3.1 backports for Debian Buster and Raspian: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show ... a/minitube
I have some Stretch backports cooking, but they need additional backports to be done first.
Since it uses libmpv for playback, if you have GPU hardware video decoding working in mpv, the minitube videos also play back with the hardware decoding, so the CPU use doesn't go up even a whisker.
I have some Stretch backports cooking, but they need additional backports to be done first.
Since it uses libmpv for playback, if you have GPU hardware video decoding working in mpv, the minitube videos also play back with the hardware decoding, so the CPU use doesn't go up even a whisker.
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Re: Is Minitube already bust in Buster?
Stretch backports are in this repo, which already had the ffmpeg 4 and mpv 0.29 packages that it needed to build:
https://build.opensuse.org/package/show ... 4/minitube
https://build.opensuse.org/package/show ... 4/minitube
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Re: Is Minitube already bust in Buster?
Really?stevepusser wrote:Let's say I'm very busy and don't have time to hunt for these statements.
https://flavio.tordini.org/privacy
Information Collection And Use
We collect several different types of information for various purposes to provide and improve our Service to you.
Types of Data Collected
Personal Data
While using our Service, we may ask you to provide us with certain personally identifiable information that can be used to contact or identify you (“Personal Data”). Personally identifiable information may include, but is not limited to:
Email address
First name and last name
Cookies and Usage Data
Use of Data
Application uses the collected data for various purposes:
To provide and maintain the Service
To notify you about changes to our Service
To allow you to participate in interactive features of our Service when you choose to do so
To provide customer care and support
To provide analysis or valuable information so that we can improve the Service
To monitor the usage of the Service
To detect, prevent and address technical issues
Transfer Of Data
Your information, including Personal Data, may be transferred to — and maintained on — computers located outside of your state, province, country or other governmental jurisdiction where the data protection laws may differ than those from your jurisdiction.
If you are located outside Italy and choose to provide information to us, please note that we transfer the data, including Personal Data, to Italy and process it there.
In other words they bend over to government agencies and LE and don't give a crap about your privacyDisclosure Of Data
Legal Requirements
Application may disclose your Personal Data in the good faith belief that such action is necessary to:
To comply with a legal obligation
To protect against legal liability
Service Providers
We may employ third party companies and individuals to facilitate our Service (“Service Providers”), to provide the Service on our behalf, to perform Service-related services or to assist us in analyzing how our Service is used.
These third parties have access to your Personal Data only to perform these tasks on our behalf and are obligated not to disclose or use it for any other purpose.
Analytics
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Re: Is Minitube already bust in Buster?
It looks like a boilerplate website privacy statement to me. If you have any real evidence that minitube is doing telemetry, such as monitoring it with wireshark, file a bug against it immediately with Debian so that can be removed. But mere suspicion is not a bug.
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Re: Is Minitube already bust in Buster?
Their statement saying that they do is pretty much real evidence..stevepusser wrote:if you have any real evidence that minitube is doing telemetry
I don't want nor ever intended to get into an argument over this.
The spyware thing was more of a passing joke but any software that collects and analyzes data and then shares it with a third party is pretty much spyware.
So I guess my point is why use this thing you might as well just use google(which does most of this anyway so why double it up).
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Re: Is Minitube already bust in Buster?
SMTube is a similar application, but might be less suspicious to you. But it also needs to be kept updated to keep up with Youtube API changes.
https://repology.org/project/smtube/versions
Debian isn't doing very well in that regard, but I do keep it updated for MX Linux. The MX 15 packages are built on vanilla Jessie pbuilders and the MX 17 on Stretch. The MX19 ones are built on Buster.
https://repology.org/project/smtube/versions
Debian isn't doing very well in that regard, but I do keep it updated for MX Linux. The MX 15 packages are built on vanilla Jessie pbuilders and the MX 17 on Stretch. The MX19 ones are built on Buster.
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Re: Is Minitube already bust in Buster?
The thing is that(I think correct me if I am wrong) stuff like that comes from non free and conrtib.stevepusser wrote: Debian isn't doing very well in that regard,
So we almost can't blame Debian but then again they let it be in their repo.
Re: Is Minitube already bust in Buster?
Yes, the license quoted from above certainly looks a bit intrusive.
It goes without saying that binary packages backported from source available in the main unstable repository have not been tested for security so, until one is quite sure, it could be run by using firejail "a SUID security sandbox program that reduces the risk of security breaches by restricting the running environment of untrusted applications."
It goes without saying that binary packages backported from source available in the main unstable repository have not been tested for security so, until one is quite sure, it could be run by using firejail "a SUID security sandbox program that reduces the risk of security breaches by restricting the running environment of untrusted applications."
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Re: Is Minitube already bust in Buster?
Well, you're wrong, as you can see the full original source tarballs in the repos, they are in Debian's main repo, and they are released under DFSG-compliant licenses. It's just that SMTube is orphaned in Debian, apparently. The developer also maintains Debian repos for it on the OBS, however, and that was my inspiration to learn how to use the OBS myself for package building and hosting.theblueplll wrote:The thing is that(I think correct me if I am wrong) stuff like that comes from non free and conrtib.stevepusser wrote: Debian isn't doing very well in that regard,
So we almost can't blame Debian but then again they let it be in their repo.
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Re: Is Minitube already bust in Buster?
You claim to know so much about the application yet didn't know what the privacy policy was or where to find it?stevepusser wrote:
Well, you're wrong, as you can see the full original source tarballs in the repos, they are in Debian's main repo, and they are released under DFSG-compliant licenses. It's just that SMTube is orphaned in Debian, apparently. The developer also maintains Debian repos for it on the OBS, however, and that was my inspiration to learn how to use the OBS myself for package building and hosting.
You are either full of crap or not too bright.