I'm hostile towards telemetry by default because of how much spyware there is in today's technology. I'll only allow it if it's reasonable ( e.g. a GPS getting your location, system diagnostics for software devs ) and it's consentual.
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I generally feel fine if I can preview the payload and it doesn't contain too identifiable stuff. Even better if you can redact fields. NewPipe has a simple implementation of this where it just opens up your email client with a pre-filled body.
Zero. I don't cotton to my devices phoning home ever.
So, if an application crashes on your device, you're okay with it never getting fixed because the developer has no idea it's a problem?
I love how you're implying a bug will never get fixed because I, of all people, am not using telemetry. If it's bugging you so much that's when you open up a ticket on their issue tracker.
Just tell them.
Honestly? Yeah, that would be an okay tradeoff. If it's not, I'd go file an issue with steps to reproduce it like I'd be expected to anyways.
I assume some other dumbass will leave telemetry on
Bug reports and error logs. Helps support the development of the software without it feeling like my data is sold for money unnecessarily.
On KDE Plasma I have "User Feedback" set to "Detailed system information and basic usage statistics"
None. If I encounter a bug in something I care about, I'll report it myself.
Almost none. I want all telemetry off by default, and only gets turned on by me when I want it, and with all conditions and content known.
I like the optional error reports where I can choose just the error report to send.
Of course all this only for FOSS apps.
Nothing. Unless itβs for a product I exceptionally like (count=1) I just allow bug reports.
I'm paranoid as shit so nothing
I'll happily allow telemetry if its an open source piece of software that gives you the option to "preview" what is being sent (and preferably, not automatically, but as a "Here is what we've got, does this look good?" thing). I'll have a look, make sure its nothing confidential, and send it.
Steam does this with their hardware survey, Fedora does it with its crash reporter system (as did Ubuntu when I used it long ago), and actually macOS was usually pretty good about this too from what I remember (though macOS of course isn't open source).
Absolutely none right now, but I'm open to change that policy for select software as I get more used to the FOSS ecosystem.
None. I prefer reporting an issue manually.