Testers assemble: Plasma 6.4 Beta has been released!
Plasma 6.4 will be arriving in a month, meanwhile, you can try an unstable version here:
https://kde.org/announcements/plasma/6/6.3.90/
Remember: this is beta software! This means it has only been partially tested. Install it at your own risk and report bugs to
@kde@floss.social @kde@lemmy.kde.social you should make either brave or vivaldi the default browser since firefox isnt secure anymore
@jonthegamenerd @kde@lemmy.kde.social
KDE doesn't make anything your default browser. That is your distro.
@noisytoot @kde@floss.social @kde@lemmy.kde.social @jonthegamenerd Firefox isn't secure anymore because it now has an unlimited license to use your data in any way they please. On the subject of Vivaldi, it is partially open source, not 100% proprietary, above 90% of the code is up for grabs and all of it is easily decompiled; please learn to use correct terms.
@noisytoot @jonthegamenerd Even if it is true that Vivaldi is "proprietary" which I feel IS an incorrect term, (partially open sounds better) it has a much more sound privacy policy than Firefox and is based in Iceland, one of the best countries in the world privacy wise. Don't start telling me to build from source; because I'm not gonna do that, Mozilla shouldn't have done what they did with their licensing. Period. No excuses to be made. Vivaldi is not free software, but it is still more trustable than Firefox. Please give me one instance of Vivaldi invading users privacy; Firefox does it constantly.
@noisytoot @jonthegamenerd I see no issue with Vivaldi wanting to make their UI closed. It has no real security implications, since all of the features that might actually damage privacy or security "fundamentally" are open (yes, Vivaldi made most of their own code open, too, just not the UI). If you have any issues with Vivaldi privacy wise, then don't make excuses and look through it yourself on your PC... They encourage it since a lot of developers do it for plugins, anyway. There is no real issue with the UI being closed.
@noisytoot @jonthegamenerd Vivaldi takes a different approach to their code; it is not obfuscated or hidden away. Anyone can look at it, despite it being "proprietary", unlike with other browsers, (i.e: chrome, microsoft edge) which keep that code obfuscated and hidden. Vivaldi is essentially source available.
@DavidsCreation @jonthegamenerd I agree that Firefox and Chromium arenโt great for practical user modifiability despite the fact that theyโre free software. I might switch to Nyxt whenever it gains WebExtensions support. Itโs basically the Emacs of web browsers - written in Common Lisp and meant to be easily user-modifiable.
@noisytoot @jonthegamenerd One of the Vivaldi developers said in a blog that modding Vivaldi's closed source code for personal use is okay, actually :3
I don't blame you for disliking the proprietary software idea in general, I just don't have an issue with it in this circumstance because it's only 5% of the code, which is changeable and able to be looked at anyway.
@noisytoot @jonthegamenerd That sounds reasonable. Open source wise I would recommend using mullvad browser (Firefox based) in the mean time, as it's certified by the TOR browser project and maintained VERY well.
>Are announcement-esque notable changes changelogs written for test releases like these?
No. The next announcement will be for the final release of 6.4 on 17th June.