![]() There is in fact, another way to do this that is easy and doesn't give the user the same warning, and is meant for software distributors Letting orgs change the default search engine was an explicit, designed goal, since some wanted to redirect people to their internal searches by default, etc. IE had a deployment kit that let you deploy managed browser settings, but you didn't get told (this changed, eventually, i think, it's been a while) Back then, Google was one of the first to tell you someone was doing that to you so that you knew your organization could see and control your settings. The feature overall came from a desire of enterprises to manage browser settings. ![]() The notion that it has anything to do with keeping search the default or not is like, such a silly assumption i don't know where to begin. ![]() It's just telling you that, as it should. Just because Debian thinks that they are doing the right thing, they are in fact, controlling the user's settings through a policy This is managed policy, and this is a 100% good way of letting the user know that someone else has control of their settings
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