How to Opt Out of System Information Reports

The name of the pictureThe name of the pictureThe name of the pictureClash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP








up vote
9
down vote

favorite












During installation of Ubuntu 18.04, after the runtime environment is enabled, and during the first login, a question pops up asking whether you want to Help Improve Ubuntu.



enter image description here



(Screenshot is from the 18.04 first-login "Welcome" process)



If you say yes, then a brief report is sent to Canonical describing basic characteristics of your system such as Processor type (AMD or i386), screen resolution and the default desktop environment. Nothing very intrusive.



This helps Canonical get an accurate count of installations and such. And they ask it so obviously and politely that I decided that "It's not a bug - it's a feature" and is OK by me.



So I said yes but now I have changed my mind due to the reporting that suggests that Canonical will become the next Microsoft - but do not want to reinstall my system.



How can I turn this feature off?







share|improve this question






















  • As for 16.04, yes it does have a fairly unnoticeable opt-out checkbox during install that does pretty much the same thing. But 16.04 has proven to only send the information one time. So it is only getting noticed now because suddenly it is a big pop-up in the initial "Welcome" login session. And the onus is on us to know the implications of allowing it to do so. Hence this question about how to turn it off later. The security folks have been watching 16.04 and it does not send crash reports automatically. This may well become an issue in 18.04 later, though.
    – SDsolar
    Apr 24 at 14:37














up vote
9
down vote

favorite












During installation of Ubuntu 18.04, after the runtime environment is enabled, and during the first login, a question pops up asking whether you want to Help Improve Ubuntu.



enter image description here



(Screenshot is from the 18.04 first-login "Welcome" process)



If you say yes, then a brief report is sent to Canonical describing basic characteristics of your system such as Processor type (AMD or i386), screen resolution and the default desktop environment. Nothing very intrusive.



This helps Canonical get an accurate count of installations and such. And they ask it so obviously and politely that I decided that "It's not a bug - it's a feature" and is OK by me.



So I said yes but now I have changed my mind due to the reporting that suggests that Canonical will become the next Microsoft - but do not want to reinstall my system.



How can I turn this feature off?







share|improve this question






















  • As for 16.04, yes it does have a fairly unnoticeable opt-out checkbox during install that does pretty much the same thing. But 16.04 has proven to only send the information one time. So it is only getting noticed now because suddenly it is a big pop-up in the initial "Welcome" login session. And the onus is on us to know the implications of allowing it to do so. Hence this question about how to turn it off later. The security folks have been watching 16.04 and it does not send crash reports automatically. This may well become an issue in 18.04 later, though.
    – SDsolar
    Apr 24 at 14:37












up vote
9
down vote

favorite









up vote
9
down vote

favorite











During installation of Ubuntu 18.04, after the runtime environment is enabled, and during the first login, a question pops up asking whether you want to Help Improve Ubuntu.



enter image description here



(Screenshot is from the 18.04 first-login "Welcome" process)



If you say yes, then a brief report is sent to Canonical describing basic characteristics of your system such as Processor type (AMD or i386), screen resolution and the default desktop environment. Nothing very intrusive.



This helps Canonical get an accurate count of installations and such. And they ask it so obviously and politely that I decided that "It's not a bug - it's a feature" and is OK by me.



So I said yes but now I have changed my mind due to the reporting that suggests that Canonical will become the next Microsoft - but do not want to reinstall my system.



How can I turn this feature off?







share|improve this question














During installation of Ubuntu 18.04, after the runtime environment is enabled, and during the first login, a question pops up asking whether you want to Help Improve Ubuntu.



enter image description here



(Screenshot is from the 18.04 first-login "Welcome" process)



If you say yes, then a brief report is sent to Canonical describing basic characteristics of your system such as Processor type (AMD or i386), screen resolution and the default desktop environment. Nothing very intrusive.



This helps Canonical get an accurate count of installations and such. And they ask it so obviously and politely that I decided that "It's not a bug - it's a feature" and is OK by me.



So I said yes but now I have changed my mind due to the reporting that suggests that Canonical will become the next Microsoft - but do not want to reinstall my system.



How can I turn this feature off?









share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Apr 24 at 14:35

























asked Apr 23 at 17:38









SDsolar

1,34631137




1,34631137











  • As for 16.04, yes it does have a fairly unnoticeable opt-out checkbox during install that does pretty much the same thing. But 16.04 has proven to only send the information one time. So it is only getting noticed now because suddenly it is a big pop-up in the initial "Welcome" login session. And the onus is on us to know the implications of allowing it to do so. Hence this question about how to turn it off later. The security folks have been watching 16.04 and it does not send crash reports automatically. This may well become an issue in 18.04 later, though.
    – SDsolar
    Apr 24 at 14:37
















  • As for 16.04, yes it does have a fairly unnoticeable opt-out checkbox during install that does pretty much the same thing. But 16.04 has proven to only send the information one time. So it is only getting noticed now because suddenly it is a big pop-up in the initial "Welcome" login session. And the onus is on us to know the implications of allowing it to do so. Hence this question about how to turn it off later. The security folks have been watching 16.04 and it does not send crash reports automatically. This may well become an issue in 18.04 later, though.
    – SDsolar
    Apr 24 at 14:37















As for 16.04, yes it does have a fairly unnoticeable opt-out checkbox during install that does pretty much the same thing. But 16.04 has proven to only send the information one time. So it is only getting noticed now because suddenly it is a big pop-up in the initial "Welcome" login session. And the onus is on us to know the implications of allowing it to do so. Hence this question about how to turn it off later. The security folks have been watching 16.04 and it does not send crash reports automatically. This may well become an issue in 18.04 later, though.
– SDsolar
Apr 24 at 14:37




As for 16.04, yes it does have a fairly unnoticeable opt-out checkbox during install that does pretty much the same thing. But 16.04 has proven to only send the information one time. So it is only getting noticed now because suddenly it is a big pop-up in the initial "Welcome" login session. And the onus is on us to know the implications of allowing it to do so. Hence this question about how to turn it off later. The security folks have been watching 16.04 and it does not send crash reports automatically. This may well become an issue in 18.04 later, though.
– SDsolar
Apr 24 at 14:37










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
6
down vote













There are at least four pieces of spyware installed by default on ubuntu 18.04 bionic and the accepted answer only really disables popcon.



Why ` ubuntu-report -f send no ` doesn't work



You didn't have to sudo it beacuse it doesn't set a system-global flag. The net effect of telling ubuntu-report not to send reports is twofold,



  1. It sends a report anyway. Admittedly, the opt-out version of the report just says OptOut:true, but it's still hitting the telemetry server, leaking your IP and HTTP headers.

  2. It saves your preference in your home folder, e.g. /home/yournamehere/.cache/ubuntu-report, which means every user on your system would need to run this command to stop the machine from phoning home.

What to do instead



  • Install offline, or block access to metrics.ubuntu.com and popcon.ubuntu.com on your router.

  • Remove the spyware using apt purge:

    sudo apt purge ubuntu-report popularity-contest apport whoopsie


Further reading




  • ubuntu-devel mailing list thread where ubuntu-report was first proposed

Questions on here:



  • What is the Whoopsie process and how can I remove it?

  • Removing popularity-contest without trashing the system?

  • How can I permanently disable apport?

Source code



  • ubuntu-report

  • apport

  • whoopsie

  • popularity contest

Docker users rejoice



As of 30 April 2018, the ubuntu:bionic docker image at the docker hub does not include any of this stuff.



PSA



The price of freedom is eternal vigilance.






share|improve this answer






















  • If you could add something about preventing those packages from being installed (they are depends of ubuntu-standard) in the beginning, this would make this post complete (it's very good already!)
    – Sebastian Stark
    May 4 at 10:49

















up vote
6
down vote



accepted










To opt-out of future telemetry reporting, issue the following command:



ubuntu-report -f send no


This command will send Canonical a brief message stating that your system is opting out of all future reporting. No other system data is sent.



Note that it still helps Canonical keep an accurate count of live installations.



Rather than simply appearing once in their records (a flash in the pan, or test installation) you will have notified them that your system is still running and that lack of future reports should be considered normal.



======================================================



Note that when you use the Software installation tool in Unity, that data is sent from your system as a part of their "Popularity Contest" - this has been happening since at least 14.04 LTS.



So I also put up a succinct answer to the old question about whether disabling that will hurt your system. (Short answer, no):



Removing popularity-contest without trashing the system?



Excerpt:




To remove the package entirely in Ubuntu 16.04 LTS



sudo apt-get remove popularity-contest


Yes, it mentions ubuntu-standard in the removal dialog.

So look at this list:



Packages Related to ubuntu-standard (Ubuntu.com)



Notice that nano is included in the Ubuntu Standard list.



To verify that removing popularity-contest via this method has not
hurt the system, try it out:



nano test.tmp


and you will see that nano still works fine.



In other words, removing the install stub left over from the initial
installation of the Ubuntu Standard packages will not damage the
system in other ways.




Final step: Remove the daily cron entry



sudo rm /etc/cron.daily/popularity-contest







share|improve this answer





























    up vote
    1
    down vote













    For Ubuntu 16.04 LTS, the settings are still available after install, at any time, in the Activity Log Manager.



    Here are some screenshots of it in action:



    enter image description here



    enter image description here



    enter image description here



    enter image description here



    enter image description here



    The very first screen shot shows the sending of information to Canonical.



    The rest affect the size of your log files.






    share|improve this answer




















      Your Answer







      StackExchange.ready(function()
      var channelOptions =
      tags: "".split(" "),
      id: "89"
      ;
      initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

      StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
      // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
      if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
      StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
      createEditor();
      );

      else
      createEditor();

      );

      function createEditor()
      StackExchange.prepareEditor(
      heartbeatType: 'answer',
      convertImagesToLinks: true,
      noModals: false,
      showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
      reputationToPostImages: 10,
      bindNavPrevention: true,
      postfix: "",
      onDemand: true,
      discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
      ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
      );



      );













       

      draft saved


      draft discarded


















      StackExchange.ready(
      function ()
      StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2faskubuntu.com%2fquestions%2f1027532%2fhow-to-opt-out-of-system-information-reports%23new-answer', 'question_page');

      );

      Post as a guest






























      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes








      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes








      up vote
      6
      down vote













      There are at least four pieces of spyware installed by default on ubuntu 18.04 bionic and the accepted answer only really disables popcon.



      Why ` ubuntu-report -f send no ` doesn't work



      You didn't have to sudo it beacuse it doesn't set a system-global flag. The net effect of telling ubuntu-report not to send reports is twofold,



      1. It sends a report anyway. Admittedly, the opt-out version of the report just says OptOut:true, but it's still hitting the telemetry server, leaking your IP and HTTP headers.

      2. It saves your preference in your home folder, e.g. /home/yournamehere/.cache/ubuntu-report, which means every user on your system would need to run this command to stop the machine from phoning home.

      What to do instead



      • Install offline, or block access to metrics.ubuntu.com and popcon.ubuntu.com on your router.

      • Remove the spyware using apt purge:

        sudo apt purge ubuntu-report popularity-contest apport whoopsie


      Further reading




      • ubuntu-devel mailing list thread where ubuntu-report was first proposed

      Questions on here:



      • What is the Whoopsie process and how can I remove it?

      • Removing popularity-contest without trashing the system?

      • How can I permanently disable apport?

      Source code



      • ubuntu-report

      • apport

      • whoopsie

      • popularity contest

      Docker users rejoice



      As of 30 April 2018, the ubuntu:bionic docker image at the docker hub does not include any of this stuff.



      PSA



      The price of freedom is eternal vigilance.






      share|improve this answer






















      • If you could add something about preventing those packages from being installed (they are depends of ubuntu-standard) in the beginning, this would make this post complete (it's very good already!)
        – Sebastian Stark
        May 4 at 10:49














      up vote
      6
      down vote













      There are at least four pieces of spyware installed by default on ubuntu 18.04 bionic and the accepted answer only really disables popcon.



      Why ` ubuntu-report -f send no ` doesn't work



      You didn't have to sudo it beacuse it doesn't set a system-global flag. The net effect of telling ubuntu-report not to send reports is twofold,



      1. It sends a report anyway. Admittedly, the opt-out version of the report just says OptOut:true, but it's still hitting the telemetry server, leaking your IP and HTTP headers.

      2. It saves your preference in your home folder, e.g. /home/yournamehere/.cache/ubuntu-report, which means every user on your system would need to run this command to stop the machine from phoning home.

      What to do instead



      • Install offline, or block access to metrics.ubuntu.com and popcon.ubuntu.com on your router.

      • Remove the spyware using apt purge:

        sudo apt purge ubuntu-report popularity-contest apport whoopsie


      Further reading




      • ubuntu-devel mailing list thread where ubuntu-report was first proposed

      Questions on here:



      • What is the Whoopsie process and how can I remove it?

      • Removing popularity-contest without trashing the system?

      • How can I permanently disable apport?

      Source code



      • ubuntu-report

      • apport

      • whoopsie

      • popularity contest

      Docker users rejoice



      As of 30 April 2018, the ubuntu:bionic docker image at the docker hub does not include any of this stuff.



      PSA



      The price of freedom is eternal vigilance.






      share|improve this answer






















      • If you could add something about preventing those packages from being installed (they are depends of ubuntu-standard) in the beginning, this would make this post complete (it's very good already!)
        – Sebastian Stark
        May 4 at 10:49












      up vote
      6
      down vote










      up vote
      6
      down vote









      There are at least four pieces of spyware installed by default on ubuntu 18.04 bionic and the accepted answer only really disables popcon.



      Why ` ubuntu-report -f send no ` doesn't work



      You didn't have to sudo it beacuse it doesn't set a system-global flag. The net effect of telling ubuntu-report not to send reports is twofold,



      1. It sends a report anyway. Admittedly, the opt-out version of the report just says OptOut:true, but it's still hitting the telemetry server, leaking your IP and HTTP headers.

      2. It saves your preference in your home folder, e.g. /home/yournamehere/.cache/ubuntu-report, which means every user on your system would need to run this command to stop the machine from phoning home.

      What to do instead



      • Install offline, or block access to metrics.ubuntu.com and popcon.ubuntu.com on your router.

      • Remove the spyware using apt purge:

        sudo apt purge ubuntu-report popularity-contest apport whoopsie


      Further reading




      • ubuntu-devel mailing list thread where ubuntu-report was first proposed

      Questions on here:



      • What is the Whoopsie process and how can I remove it?

      • Removing popularity-contest without trashing the system?

      • How can I permanently disable apport?

      Source code



      • ubuntu-report

      • apport

      • whoopsie

      • popularity contest

      Docker users rejoice



      As of 30 April 2018, the ubuntu:bionic docker image at the docker hub does not include any of this stuff.



      PSA



      The price of freedom is eternal vigilance.






      share|improve this answer














      There are at least four pieces of spyware installed by default on ubuntu 18.04 bionic and the accepted answer only really disables popcon.



      Why ` ubuntu-report -f send no ` doesn't work



      You didn't have to sudo it beacuse it doesn't set a system-global flag. The net effect of telling ubuntu-report not to send reports is twofold,



      1. It sends a report anyway. Admittedly, the opt-out version of the report just says OptOut:true, but it's still hitting the telemetry server, leaking your IP and HTTP headers.

      2. It saves your preference in your home folder, e.g. /home/yournamehere/.cache/ubuntu-report, which means every user on your system would need to run this command to stop the machine from phoning home.

      What to do instead



      • Install offline, or block access to metrics.ubuntu.com and popcon.ubuntu.com on your router.

      • Remove the spyware using apt purge:

        sudo apt purge ubuntu-report popularity-contest apport whoopsie


      Further reading




      • ubuntu-devel mailing list thread where ubuntu-report was first proposed

      Questions on here:



      • What is the Whoopsie process and how can I remove it?

      • Removing popularity-contest without trashing the system?

      • How can I permanently disable apport?

      Source code



      • ubuntu-report

      • apport

      • whoopsie

      • popularity contest

      Docker users rejoice



      As of 30 April 2018, the ubuntu:bionic docker image at the docker hub does not include any of this stuff.



      PSA



      The price of freedom is eternal vigilance.







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited Apr 30 at 15:23

























      answered Apr 30 at 15:02









      Dan

      1614




      1614











      • If you could add something about preventing those packages from being installed (they are depends of ubuntu-standard) in the beginning, this would make this post complete (it's very good already!)
        – Sebastian Stark
        May 4 at 10:49
















      • If you could add something about preventing those packages from being installed (they are depends of ubuntu-standard) in the beginning, this would make this post complete (it's very good already!)
        – Sebastian Stark
        May 4 at 10:49















      If you could add something about preventing those packages from being installed (they are depends of ubuntu-standard) in the beginning, this would make this post complete (it's very good already!)
      – Sebastian Stark
      May 4 at 10:49




      If you could add something about preventing those packages from being installed (they are depends of ubuntu-standard) in the beginning, this would make this post complete (it's very good already!)
      – Sebastian Stark
      May 4 at 10:49












      up vote
      6
      down vote



      accepted










      To opt-out of future telemetry reporting, issue the following command:



      ubuntu-report -f send no


      This command will send Canonical a brief message stating that your system is opting out of all future reporting. No other system data is sent.



      Note that it still helps Canonical keep an accurate count of live installations.



      Rather than simply appearing once in their records (a flash in the pan, or test installation) you will have notified them that your system is still running and that lack of future reports should be considered normal.



      ======================================================



      Note that when you use the Software installation tool in Unity, that data is sent from your system as a part of their "Popularity Contest" - this has been happening since at least 14.04 LTS.



      So I also put up a succinct answer to the old question about whether disabling that will hurt your system. (Short answer, no):



      Removing popularity-contest without trashing the system?



      Excerpt:




      To remove the package entirely in Ubuntu 16.04 LTS



      sudo apt-get remove popularity-contest


      Yes, it mentions ubuntu-standard in the removal dialog.

      So look at this list:



      Packages Related to ubuntu-standard (Ubuntu.com)



      Notice that nano is included in the Ubuntu Standard list.



      To verify that removing popularity-contest via this method has not
      hurt the system, try it out:



      nano test.tmp


      and you will see that nano still works fine.



      In other words, removing the install stub left over from the initial
      installation of the Ubuntu Standard packages will not damage the
      system in other ways.




      Final step: Remove the daily cron entry



      sudo rm /etc/cron.daily/popularity-contest







      share|improve this answer


























        up vote
        6
        down vote



        accepted










        To opt-out of future telemetry reporting, issue the following command:



        ubuntu-report -f send no


        This command will send Canonical a brief message stating that your system is opting out of all future reporting. No other system data is sent.



        Note that it still helps Canonical keep an accurate count of live installations.



        Rather than simply appearing once in their records (a flash in the pan, or test installation) you will have notified them that your system is still running and that lack of future reports should be considered normal.



        ======================================================



        Note that when you use the Software installation tool in Unity, that data is sent from your system as a part of their "Popularity Contest" - this has been happening since at least 14.04 LTS.



        So I also put up a succinct answer to the old question about whether disabling that will hurt your system. (Short answer, no):



        Removing popularity-contest without trashing the system?



        Excerpt:




        To remove the package entirely in Ubuntu 16.04 LTS



        sudo apt-get remove popularity-contest


        Yes, it mentions ubuntu-standard in the removal dialog.

        So look at this list:



        Packages Related to ubuntu-standard (Ubuntu.com)



        Notice that nano is included in the Ubuntu Standard list.



        To verify that removing popularity-contest via this method has not
        hurt the system, try it out:



        nano test.tmp


        and you will see that nano still works fine.



        In other words, removing the install stub left over from the initial
        installation of the Ubuntu Standard packages will not damage the
        system in other ways.




        Final step: Remove the daily cron entry



        sudo rm /etc/cron.daily/popularity-contest







        share|improve this answer
























          up vote
          6
          down vote



          accepted







          up vote
          6
          down vote



          accepted






          To opt-out of future telemetry reporting, issue the following command:



          ubuntu-report -f send no


          This command will send Canonical a brief message stating that your system is opting out of all future reporting. No other system data is sent.



          Note that it still helps Canonical keep an accurate count of live installations.



          Rather than simply appearing once in their records (a flash in the pan, or test installation) you will have notified them that your system is still running and that lack of future reports should be considered normal.



          ======================================================



          Note that when you use the Software installation tool in Unity, that data is sent from your system as a part of their "Popularity Contest" - this has been happening since at least 14.04 LTS.



          So I also put up a succinct answer to the old question about whether disabling that will hurt your system. (Short answer, no):



          Removing popularity-contest without trashing the system?



          Excerpt:




          To remove the package entirely in Ubuntu 16.04 LTS



          sudo apt-get remove popularity-contest


          Yes, it mentions ubuntu-standard in the removal dialog.

          So look at this list:



          Packages Related to ubuntu-standard (Ubuntu.com)



          Notice that nano is included in the Ubuntu Standard list.



          To verify that removing popularity-contest via this method has not
          hurt the system, try it out:



          nano test.tmp


          and you will see that nano still works fine.



          In other words, removing the install stub left over from the initial
          installation of the Ubuntu Standard packages will not damage the
          system in other ways.




          Final step: Remove the daily cron entry



          sudo rm /etc/cron.daily/popularity-contest







          share|improve this answer














          To opt-out of future telemetry reporting, issue the following command:



          ubuntu-report -f send no


          This command will send Canonical a brief message stating that your system is opting out of all future reporting. No other system data is sent.



          Note that it still helps Canonical keep an accurate count of live installations.



          Rather than simply appearing once in their records (a flash in the pan, or test installation) you will have notified them that your system is still running and that lack of future reports should be considered normal.



          ======================================================



          Note that when you use the Software installation tool in Unity, that data is sent from your system as a part of their "Popularity Contest" - this has been happening since at least 14.04 LTS.



          So I also put up a succinct answer to the old question about whether disabling that will hurt your system. (Short answer, no):



          Removing popularity-contest without trashing the system?



          Excerpt:




          To remove the package entirely in Ubuntu 16.04 LTS



          sudo apt-get remove popularity-contest


          Yes, it mentions ubuntu-standard in the removal dialog.

          So look at this list:



          Packages Related to ubuntu-standard (Ubuntu.com)



          Notice that nano is included in the Ubuntu Standard list.



          To verify that removing popularity-contest via this method has not
          hurt the system, try it out:



          nano test.tmp


          and you will see that nano still works fine.



          In other words, removing the install stub left over from the initial
          installation of the Ubuntu Standard packages will not damage the
          system in other ways.




          Final step: Remove the daily cron entry



          sudo rm /etc/cron.daily/popularity-contest








          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Apr 30 at 21:32

























          answered Apr 23 at 17:38









          SDsolar

          1,34631137




          1,34631137




















              up vote
              1
              down vote













              For Ubuntu 16.04 LTS, the settings are still available after install, at any time, in the Activity Log Manager.



              Here are some screenshots of it in action:



              enter image description here



              enter image description here



              enter image description here



              enter image description here



              enter image description here



              The very first screen shot shows the sending of information to Canonical.



              The rest affect the size of your log files.






              share|improve this answer
























                up vote
                1
                down vote













                For Ubuntu 16.04 LTS, the settings are still available after install, at any time, in the Activity Log Manager.



                Here are some screenshots of it in action:



                enter image description here



                enter image description here



                enter image description here



                enter image description here



                enter image description here



                The very first screen shot shows the sending of information to Canonical.



                The rest affect the size of your log files.






                share|improve this answer






















                  up vote
                  1
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  1
                  down vote









                  For Ubuntu 16.04 LTS, the settings are still available after install, at any time, in the Activity Log Manager.



                  Here are some screenshots of it in action:



                  enter image description here



                  enter image description here



                  enter image description here



                  enter image description here



                  enter image description here



                  The very first screen shot shows the sending of information to Canonical.



                  The rest affect the size of your log files.






                  share|improve this answer












                  For Ubuntu 16.04 LTS, the settings are still available after install, at any time, in the Activity Log Manager.



                  Here are some screenshots of it in action:



                  enter image description here



                  enter image description here



                  enter image description here



                  enter image description here



                  enter image description here



                  The very first screen shot shows the sending of information to Canonical.



                  The rest affect the size of your log files.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered May 6 at 22:14









                  SDsolar

                  1,34631137




                  1,34631137



























                       

                      draft saved


                      draft discarded















































                       


                      draft saved


                      draft discarded














                      StackExchange.ready(
                      function ()
                      StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2faskubuntu.com%2fquestions%2f1027532%2fhow-to-opt-out-of-system-information-reports%23new-answer', 'question_page');

                      );

                      Post as a guest













































































                      Popular posts from this blog

                      pylint3 and pip3 broken

                      Missing snmpget and snmpwalk

                      How to enroll fingerprints to Ubuntu 17.10 with VFS491