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WTH is happening at the GNOME Foundation ?! - Linux Weekly News


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Timestamps:
00:00 Intro
00:32 Sponsor: TuxCare
01:45 GNOME Executive Director steps down
04:41 AI used for backporting patches to the Linux kernel
07:02 GhostBSD launches Gerschwin Desktop, a Mac OS clone
09:06 Bazaar app store is available on Flathub
10:37 Firefox adds web apps backs, sort of
12:21 Vivaldi says no to AI
14:04 Google will block sideloading of unverified apps
16:07 Another Asahi dev leaves the project
17:44 Wikipedia editors reject AI
20:00 Sponsor: Tuxedo Computers

Links:

GNOME Executive Director steps down
blogs.gnome.org/aday/2025/08/2…

AI used for backporting patches to the Linux kernel
phoronix.com/news/AI-Help-Back…

GhostBSD launches Gerschwin Desktop, a Mac OS clone
github.com/gershwin-desktop/ge…

Bazaar app store is available on Flathub
omgubuntu.co.uk/2025/08/bazaar…

Firefox adds web apps backs, sort of
omgubuntu.co.uk/2025/08/firefo…

Vivaldi says no to AI
vivaldi.com/blog/keep-explorin…

Google will block sideloading of unverified apps
arstechnica.com/gadgets/2025/0…

Another Asahi dev leaves the project
rosenzweig.io/blog/asahi-gpu-p…

Wikipedia editors reject AI
webpronews.com/wikipedia-edito…


Vivaldi takes a stand: keep browsing human

Just like society, the web moves forward when people think, compare, and discover for themselves. Vivaldi believes the act of browsing is an active one. It is about seeking, questioning, and making up your own mind.

Across the industry, artificial assistants are being embedded directly into browsers, and pitched as a quicker path to answers. Google is bringing Gemini into Chrome to summarize pages and, in future, work across tabs and navigate sites on a user’s behalf. Microsoft is promoting Edge as an AI browser, including new modes that scan what is on screen and anticipate actions.

These moves are reshaping the address bar into an assistant prompt, turning the joy of exploring into inactive spectatorship.

This shift has major consequences for the web as we know it. Independent research shows users are less likely to click through to original sources when an AI summary is present, which means fewer visits for publishers, creators, and communities that keep the web vibrant. A recent study by PewResearch found users clicked traditional results roughly half as often when AI summaries appeared. Publishers warn of dramatic traffic losses when AI overviews sit above links.

The stakes are high. New AI-native browsers and agent platforms are arriving, while regulators debate remedies that could reshape how people reach information online. The next phase of the browser wars is not about tab speed, it is about who intermediates knowledge, who benefits from attention, who controls the pathway to information, and who gets to monetize you.

Today, as other browsers race to build AI that controls how you experience the web, we are making a clear promise:

We’re taking a stand, choosing humans over hype, and we will not turn the joy of exploring into inactive spectatorship. Without exploration, the web becomes far less interesting. Our curiosity loses oxygen and the diversity of the web dies.

Jon von Tetzchner, CEO, Vivaldi


The field of machine learning in general remains an exciting one and may lead to features that are actually useful.

But right now, there is enough misinformation going around to risk adding more to the pile. We will not use an LLM to add a chatbot, a summarization solution or a suggestion engine to fill up forms for you, until more rigorous ways to do those things are available.

Vivaldi is the haven for people who still want to explore. We will continue building a browser for curious minds, power users, researchers, and anyone who values autonomy. If AI contributes to that goal without stealing intellectual property, compromising privacy or the open web, we will use it. If it turns people into passive consumers, we will not.

We will stay true to our identity, giving users control and enabling people to use the browser in combination with whatever tools they want to use. Our focus is on building a powerful personal and private browser for you to explore the web on your own terms. We will not turn exploration into passive consumption.

We’re fighting for a better web.

vivaldi.com/blog/keep-explorin…


Questa voce è stata modificata (3 ore fa)

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in reply to The Linux Experiment

I, who have not yet finished digesting Sonny's ouster for which I am still waiting for real explanations, find that it’s starting to do a lot.
in reply to The Linux Experiment

Strange stuff. I appreciate their instincts of not making everything too much of a public spectacle - the open source community has a tendency to blow things out of oroportions, to put it mildly - but it does indeed look a bit weird.

Then again one could imagine plenty of reasons that I would underatand a preference not to go public with. Hopefully they'll handle it all in a good way without too much of a mess going forwards.

in reply to The Linux Experiment

is relieving to see so many projects rejecting #AIhallucinations. I might give Vivaldi a try, but not being open source and relying on chromium is a bit of nail in the coffin.
in reply to The Linux Experiment

Sad to hear about Chrome limiting non-verified apps. Hopefully web apps, especially PWAs, can become more popular since they don't care about the OS. That, or more mobile OS options available and prevalent.
in reply to The Linux Experiment

Unfortunately, Bazaar does not scale well on my Linux phone and does not work with flathub installed in user mode.
in reply to The Linux Experiment

Quick note about android blocking sideloading (as Techlore pointed out in their recent video):
if you’re running a custom rom that doesn’t use google play services system-wide, you’ll be safe from this and still be able to download any apps you want from any store (grapheneOS users can sleep well tonight).

that said tho, i imagine that’s not a whole lot of people, and sideloading a custom rom is getting especially harder these days (looking at you Samsung).

in reply to The Linux Experiment

Software in FreeBSD/GhostBSD isn't ported from Linux. It is built from source just like on Linux. In fact, if you use the FreeBSD ports tree, you will get the latest software available. There is also a Linux emulation layer on FreeBSD for any software that you can't find.

The downside to FreeBSD is that it doesn't have the same level of hardware support as Linux. If I could get FreeBSD to run on a laptop as well as Linux, I would drop Linux in a heartbeat.