Comment by j-bos 1 year ago This law raises serious concerns about being a non UK resident using British software, like Linux Mint. 8 comments j-bos Reply nobankai 1 year ago No, it really does not. Ylpertnodi 1 year ago How can you definitively know? nobankai 1 year ago In the case of Linux Mint, I can check the commit history, build the software myself and even validate it against public checksums. It is expressly defended against these types of attacks, making it an odd choice to single out. 5 replies →
nobankai 1 year ago No, it really does not. Ylpertnodi 1 year ago How can you definitively know? nobankai 1 year ago In the case of Linux Mint, I can check the commit history, build the software myself and even validate it against public checksums. It is expressly defended against these types of attacks, making it an odd choice to single out. 5 replies →
Ylpertnodi 1 year ago How can you definitively know? nobankai 1 year ago In the case of Linux Mint, I can check the commit history, build the software myself and even validate it against public checksums. It is expressly defended against these types of attacks, making it an odd choice to single out. 5 replies →
nobankai 1 year ago In the case of Linux Mint, I can check the commit history, build the software myself and even validate it against public checksums. It is expressly defended against these types of attacks, making it an odd choice to single out. 5 replies →
No, it really does not.
How can you definitively know?
In the case of Linux Mint, I can check the commit history, build the software myself and even validate it against public checksums. It is expressly defended against these types of attacks, making it an odd choice to single out.
5 replies →