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Game engines like Unity (which powers Ubuntu) and other desktop environments use a user interface called “shell”, which is responsible for driving the main window. Each application on the desktop can display its own shell. Each shell has a set of widgets and files that it presents to the user. For example, the Dash or launcher for Unity is one of these shells.
If you were to try to do a side-by-side comparison of how Lubuntu and Ubuntu looks on a variety of laptops, desktops, and smartphones, the result would probably fall somewhere between “a little too much, a little too little” and “not at all.” I’d use the latter term to describe the results of this test – as you can see here, Lubuntu acts more or less like the average Linux installation. (I can’t always confirm that – the last time I tried was in 2007, and I used a 32-bit version of Ubuntu flavored with Xfce.)
Typically, open source projects that offer less-frequent security updates typically make it optional and/or require explicit consent of the users to install updates, unless doing so will not interfere with the functioning of the application that is requesting the updates. The Ubuntu community has trusted automatic updates for more than 10 years. Once automatic updates are enabled, it’s important to know how to handle an attack.
By default, changes to the files that encompass the global configuration for your APT environment are not rolled out to production or incorporation. An attacker may consider changing the default “allow_insecure_repositories” configuration option, so that users cannot safely activate the interactive security review dialog. You can adjust this in $APT_RCDIR/50unattended-upgrades.conf to allow your users to establish a secure corporate policy. d2c66b5586