this never happened before, it’s also not happening ion my backup computer (same OS, xubuntu 24.04).
Message: get more security updates through ubuntu pro with esm-apps enabled, learn more about ubuntu pro <url here>
How do I get rid of it.
Ubuntu never advertised itself so blatantly.
- Or, perhaps, consider another distro. - Man… At this point we really should actively be telling people to stay the hell away from Ubuntu. This is some M$Windows levels of sneaky and borderline malicious behavior. - Ubuntu/Canonical is the Microsoft of Linux distros. It’s no surprise they were the choice for WSL. - Ubuntu has been forcing decisions on users and embedding advertisements for a long time. - Examples that immediately come to mind… - When that Amazon search was embedded into the app launcher search.
- These sorts of self promotions.
- Quietly installing snaps instead of debs when using apt install
 
- We are tho, like basically every thread about Linux has at least one comment warning people. 
 
 
- How do I get rid of it. - Reinstall Debian… Problem solved, and you get rid of snap as a bonus! - This is the best answer. 
 
- There is literally not a single useful comment here. - You have packages from outside the official main repo, in the universe repo. - You are using a stable Distribution so packages are frozen and need backported security updates. - You dont get them for the optional universe repos, but if you give them a bit of money (or afaik Ubuntu pro is even free for a few devices) then they will also support these 3rd party packages. - It is an optional service, they warn you that you use outdated packages, and offer a solution. - I dont use Ubuntu and Snaps are crap, but this is totally fine. - Thank you for some much needed background information (and perhaps even some of Ubuntu’s justification)! - There is literally not a single useful comment here. - That’s a bit harsh 😜. Though, I agree the ‘f*ck-Ubuntu’-circlejerk is very present. - It is an optional service, they warn you that you use outdated packages, and offer a solution. - I guess it’s wishful thinking to argue that they should have included the security patches from the get-go. - they should have included the security patches from the get-go - I dont know how Ubuntu does that stuff, but - universeis community supported only. It is required for many normal packages, so yes you could say their service is not good enough but hey, its free Software.- If you dont pay a cent you have like nothing to complain - I’m very unfamiliar with Ubuntu, so I apologize for my ignorance. Is - universetheir AUR, COPR, OBS? I thought that PPAs were Ubuntu’s user repository.- This is what I dont understand too. No, it is for regular packages, not random 3rd party stuff. - Those are made on Launchpad and available as PPAs, originally meant to be the first step, followed by having them approved to Ubuntus repos. - So, would it be fair to say that their packages suck and they’re desperately fundraising money through ads in hopes of fixing it? - No. You are using a stable Distro. This is how stable distros work. - If you want upstream updates for all packages, use a rolling or semi-rolling release like Fedora, Arch, OpenSUSE, Gentoo, etc. - But Debian does get security updates backported, right? Like, is Ubuntu actively preventing you from getting these? 
 
 
 
 
- If you dont pay a cent you have like nothing to complain - Disagree. Trojans are totally free, and I feel I have plenty to complain about there. - What Desktop do you use with your Trojan? 
 
 
 
 
- Wow that’s a real douche maneuver 
- sudo apt remove ubuntu-advantage-tools- package ubuntu-advantage-tools is not installed, so not removed. - I can however remove ubuntu-advantage-desktop-daemon, together with apturl: common and apturl software-properties-gtk. - Should I? - Ah - that’s all I had to do to solve it on Ubuntu server 22.04. Maybe desktop is different, maybe 24.04 is different. You can try removing additional packages or following other instructions. I won’t post any links here, as I see different possible solutions and haven’t tried any other than the one above. Let us know what works. 
 
 
- Eww that’s kinda icky 
- Ubuntu never advertised itself so blatantly. - Canonical advertising their products has been a thing on Ubuntu server motd for years 
- iirc it’s from ubuntu-advantage-tools - you can remove it, but it’s set as a dependent for something important (ubuntu-minimal?) which makes it really annoying. I don’t use ubuntu anymore so hopefully someone who knows more will stop by. 
- because you chose canonical over debian. - give stock debian a try - Yeah. I finally switched and learned that what I loved about Ubuntu exists in Debian, without the extra nonsense. 
 
- As someone who stopped using Ubuntu since 2016 due to Canonical’s bullshit, what’s this “Ubuntu Pro” nonsense? Is there some premium track or something? If so, that’s disgusting and I hate it. - It’s extended security updates - What do you mean? As in security updates for old versions that are otherwise completely unsupported? As in, for enterprise users? 
 
 
- I got rid of it by signing up for Ubuntu Pro. Doesn’t cost me a thing and keeps the security updates coming in. - How does signing up work? What do they ask in terms of your data (email, name, address, more)? I tried finding out myself but their website misbehaved for some reason. - It’s been a while but I’m pretty sure it’s just an email for the Ubuntu One account. Haven’t ever gotten any junk mail from them so I don’t even remember which email I signed up with lol - Thank you for answering! 
 
 
- The amount of downvotes on this comment is a symptom of how toxic this community has become. - There’s also the herd mentality; i.e. peeps like to up vote something that has already been up voted and down vote something that has already been down voted. I was the first to up vote; with my vote it became +2 -7. So, since then, it has received 4 up votes and 6 down votes. Which is at least an improvement. - The point I wanted to make is that there’s more to it. I wouldn’t simply refer to it as symptom of toxicity and call it a day. 
 
 










