<div dir="ltr">Who is planning on going tomorrow? I went last week accidentally, no big deal, just went for a walk around the block and then used the public Linux box there.<div>And I noticed: not only had someone installed Firefox** because they did not know that, aside from branding, IceWeasel is identical (I figured it did not matter, since the reason branding had to be changed was that Debian could not include trademarks with a restrictive license like Mozilla uses [although obviously the code has a free license and is allowed] in their repositories; since we [probably?] do not care about that, it seems simplest to just leave Firefox on there and uninstall iceweasel, except it seems I have either forgotten the root password [thought it was the same as the username, <i>sfbc</i>] or it got changed) but Dropbox was installed and connected to someone's account...I saved their stuff, disconnected the account, and sent them an email telling them to leave that kind of thing for a <i>private</i> computer.<br>
And then I noticed how much stuff there was generally: literally gigabytes upon gigabytes of images, video, PDFs, music, and so on tucked away in various folders in the user directory. I moved it all to a folder on the desktop and was going to compress it but did not get a chance before I had to leave. If I had known who put each thing there, I would have encrypted it and sent the respective people the key.</div>
<div><br></div><div>Much of it seemed composed of conspiracy-theory-related media, particularly involving 9/11. I figure that is par for the course for Santa Fe, and maybe they were paranoid enough to want the improved anonymity of a public computer.</div>
<div>A lesser but still significant portion of the files were various images that seemed to have been downloaded for the purpose of putting up as a background; why one would need to do this for a computer at which one will spend a few hours tops, I have no idea. Indeed, there was an interesting sepia-tone picture of a Navajo boy running through the scrub when I got there; it disappeared when I moved the source image into the dump folder on the desktop.<br>
I decided to make an image (<a href="http://www.w3.org/Graphics/SVG/">SVG</a>, because that is how I roll) to be set as the background, it would in a very basic manner introduce people to the system, show them what is there, and ask them to clean up after themselves (by the way, thanks to whoever set up Firefox to delete history and so on when the session ends, things like that are a good idea both for preserving privacy and also for general cleanup; unfortunately, people still thought to bookmark things...). I feel like the presence of a more 'official' background would remind people that it is a public resource.</div>
<div><br></div><div>However, I had little time and only put up a draft image, so we will see if it is still up tomorrow, and I plan to bring a better one on a flash drive. If any of you know of Linux tools to match some of the Windows setups I have seen at (for example) public libraries, but that respect user intent a little more (restore a backup/savepoint/disk image between sessions, but do not disallow people from downloading or installing [as non-root?] whatever they need for that session), I would be interested to hear about them.<br>
<br>-Arlo James Barnes<br><br>**Not sure how they would do this without the root password, so maybe it was one of us. Presumably whoever did it just downloaded a .deb from one of Mozilla's sites (like <a href="http://getfirefox.com">getfirefox.com</a>) thus bypassing any repositories.</div>
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