• tomatolung@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    So we now have a four-way evidence chain - macOS kernel filesystem events, Chrome’s own per-profile state, Chrome’s runtime feature flags, and Google’s component-updater logs - all four agreeing on the same conduct, and the conduct is: a 4 GB AI model arrived on this user’s disk without consent, without notice, on a profile that received zero human input, in a window of 14 minutes and 28 seconds, on a Tuesday afternoon.

      • tomatolung@lemmy.world
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        12 hours ago

        More difficult to remove than install. Adding the file took zero clicks. Removing it requires (a) discovering the file exists, (b) understanding what it is, © navigating into a hidden user profile path, (d) deleting it (and on Windows, also clearing the read-only attribute first), and (e) accepting that Chrome will silently re-download it on next eligible window unless the user also navigates chrome://flags, enterprise policy, or platform-specific configuration tooling to disable the underlying Chrome AI feature [5]. None of those steps is documented in the place a normal user looks - none of them is even hinted at in default Chrome.

        This is 5: https://pureinfotech.com/stop-chrome-gemini-nano-download-windows-11/

        Obviously only windows focused, so how other platforms stop would require more searching.

          • TachyonTele@piefed.social
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            11 hours ago

            Don’t even bother with 11. At all.
            I bought a win11 laptop, didn’t create any accounts just installed the os… Then microsoft locked me out of the laptop with thier new bitlocker bs. It won’t even let me factory reset the effing thing.

            Switched to linux and im happy. It’s just a steam deck, but it’s still a better pc than the bit brick.

            • atomicbocks@sh.itjust.works
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              8 hours ago

              Were you able to get your bitlocker key from your Microsoft account or save it when bitlocker activated? IIRC you can use that key to access the drive from a live Linux USB, get all your files off, then just install said Linux over the encrypted Windows install (which you should be able to do even if you don’t have the key).

                • atomicbocks@sh.itjust.works
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                  8 hours ago

                  The key is created when bitlocker activates, if bitlocker is on then there is a key. It’s the same as the password you create when you encrypt your Linux disk, it just creates a stupid long one for you so you will be inclined to make an account to save it rather than just remembering it like a password.

                  • TachyonTele@piefed.social
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                    8 hours ago

                    Well theres no MS account, and there’s no way past the bitlocker screen, so… Its a bit-brick

    • MangoCats@feddit.it
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      9 hours ago

      The average new PC is equipped with a $115 1TB SSD, so 4GB is 0.4% of that storage space, all four put together comprise 1.6% of available SSD space - 1.6% of $115 is $1.84. So, across a billion users, how likely is this to make a dent in anything other than the bandwidth consumed in delivery? And updates…

      • ruby@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        7 hours ago

        my entire /usr directory is just a bit above 4 gigabytes. you can put a fully featured modern operating system into that size, or you can have google’s slop machine that no one asked for

        • MangoCats@feddit.it
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          6 hours ago

          I agree, it’s heinous, but how else are they going to sell MOAR RAM, MOAR SSD, MOAR MOAR?