More diagnostics data from desktop

Will Cooke will.cooke at canonical.com
Wed Feb 14 15:22:21 UTC 2018


Dear all,

We want to be able to focus our engineering efforts on the things that
matter most to our users, and in order to do that we need to get some more
data about sort of setups our users have and which software they are
running on it.

We would like to add a checkbox to the installer, exact wording TBD, but
along the lines of “Send diagnostics information to help improve Ubuntu”.
This would be checked by default.

The result of having that box checked would be:

* Information from the installation would be sent over HTTPS to a service
run by Canonical’s IS team.  This would be saved to disk and sent on first
boot once there is a network connection.  The file containing this data
would be available for the user to inspect.

That data would include:
   * Ubuntu Flavour
   * Ubuntu Version
   * Network connectivity or not
   * CPU family
   * RAM
   * Disk(s) size
   * Screen(s) resolution
   * GPU vendor and model
   * OEM Manufacturer
   * Location (based on the location selection made by the user at
install).  No IP information would be gathered
   * Installation duration (time taken)
   * Auto login enabled or not
   * Disk layout selected
   * Third party software selected or not
   * Download updates during install or not
   * LivePatch enabled or not

* Popcon would be installed.  This will allow us to spot trends in package
usage and help us to  focus on the packages which are of most value to our
users.

* Apport would be configured to automatically send anonymous crash reports
without user interruption.

The results of this data would be made public.  E.g. People would be able
to see that X% of Ubuntu users are based in .de vs Y% in .za.  Z% of our
users run Dell hardware, and so on.
The Ubuntu privacy policy would be updated to reflect this change.

Any user can simply opt out by unchecking the box, which triggers one
simple POST stating, “diagnostics=false”.  There will be a corresponding
checkbox in the Privacy panel of GNOME Settings to toggle the state of this.

And to reiterate, the service which stores this data would *never* store IP
addresses.

We value your feedback and comments!

Cheers, Will
On behalf of the Ubuntu Desktop Team
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