Counterexample: Ubuntu sending local file system searches off to Amazon because apparently online shopping and file searching are things you want to do simultaneously.
"Your information is ours unless you are aware of it and spend unreasonable amount of time searching for the information leaking settings and disabling them." Yaay
This is incorrect. Ubuntu told me in clear words that dash searches will be sent after installation when I used dash. That's how I came to know of it, and that's why I disabled it.
I didn't like the fact that that it is opt-out and not opt-in, but yeah, way way better than Windows 10 for now.
Also note that Canonical took steps to ensure amazon doesn't get to imprint your system by proxying the requests through their server.
Free as in freedom, not beer. You can look at the code of the free software, therefore tell if it's phoning home or not. More importantly, changing it.
Exactly. This is how the Google Chromium always-on voice recognition payload was discovered, for example. We may never have known about it if it wasn't an open source project, or at least we wouldn't have heard about it until long after it shipped.
Not many, but the effort is parallelizable. If you find a security problem and report it in public, others can verify it, and still others can benefit from the fix even if they never would have bothered to look for themselves.
Many software projects I use are hosted on SourceForge. While SF has been using some nasty techniques with binary installers, the source code is, as far as I know, untouched.
And, as soon as it's touched, the project maintainers can shut down the SourceForge repos and move on to someplace else.
It's not a guarantee of security, privacy or anonymity, but open source is still your best chance to get any (or all) of the three.