Is it of no concern that the main repository through which GNOME is to distribute all stable flatpaks (Flathub) contains several malicious, non-libre programs? (With nothing reminiscent of radical separation from the libre ones, too, from what I’ve noticed.)
Regards // Tirifto > The goal of flathub (https://flathub.org/) is to be a single location > where you can find builds of the latest stable version of linux > desktop applications, ideally maintained by the upstream author. That > way the experience for flatpak users is much nicer, just add one > remote and you can then find all apps via e.g. gnome-software. > > In line with this, I last week moved all the remaining applications > from the gnome-apps-nightly stable branch to flathub and disabled > further builds from the stable branch. gnome-apps-nightly is still > used for the semi-automatic nightly builds from git master though. > > This means that in the future, stable releases that wants to be > flatpaked should be built via flathub. I wrote some docs on how do to > this on the flathub wiki: > > https://github.com/flathub/flathub/wiki/Maintaining-an-application- > on-flathub > > This week mail out all the maintainers of the current apps and ensure > they have access to the new repos. If anyone wants to add new apps to > flathub, the instructions for that are here: > > https://github.com/flathub/flathub/wiki/Submission-Guidelines
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