** Summary changed:

- "Fix" for #1431753 enables nVidia drivers even if formerly disabled, 
potentially breaking working systems 
+ Fix for #1431753 enables nVidia drivers even if formerly disabled, 
potentially breaking working systems

** Description changed:

  A lot of people, like me, had NVidia drivers installed and disabled
  since around Ubuntu 12.04, when you could easily choose whether to use
  them or not. Since they were buggy with some models of NVidia cards,
  many of us just turned them off.
  
  It wasn't necessary to uninstall them at that time. You would just go to
- a nice System Settings screen and you would turn them off and forget
- about them. And there was no warning or indication that you were
+ a nice System Settings screen and you would choose Nouveau instead and
+ forget about them. And there was no warning or indication that you were
  supposed to uninstall them.
  
  Recently, in order to fix #1431753, an automatic update has been
  released that replaces NVidia drivers 331 with 340.
  
  Unfortunately, it also forcefully reenables them, as now having NVidia 
drivers installed but disabled is not supported any more.
  So, people like me who had NVidia drivers 331 installed and not being used, 
now have NVidia drivers 340 installed and enabled, and since they are exactly 
as buggy as version 331 (causing random inability to boot half of the times, 
and random screen freezes when using the touchpad), this is a major annoyance.
  
  An automatic update that breaks a working system has a bug, no matter
  what; and this is especially unquestionable if, whatever configuration
  that causes the system to break with the new update, was not the result
  of the user's tinkering and touching stuff he wasn't supposed to touch,
  but was just a configuration that at some point had been supported, and
  which had been established via the standard user interface provided in
  earlier versions of the system.
  
  This situation must be fixed without obliging the user to take any particular 
action.
  If that is not possible, then the next update should cause a popup message to 
be displayed, instructing the user about what to do if in order to (100% 
safely) disable or uninstall NVidia drivers if he needs to.

** Description changed:

  A lot of people, like me, had NVidia drivers installed and disabled
  since around Ubuntu 12.04, when you could easily choose whether to use
  them or not. Since they were buggy with some models of NVidia cards,
  many of us just turned them off.
  
  It wasn't necessary to uninstall them at that time. You would just go to
  a nice System Settings screen and you would choose Nouveau instead and
  forget about them. And there was no warning or indication that you were
  supposed to uninstall them.
  
  Recently, in order to fix #1431753, an automatic update has been
  released that replaces NVidia drivers 331 with 340.
  
- Unfortunately, it also forcefully reenables them, as now having NVidia 
drivers installed but disabled is not supported any more.
+ Unfortunately, it also forcefully reenables them, as now having NVidia 
drivers installed but disabled is not supported any more (or that'w what I am 
insistingly told from #1431753).
  So, people like me who had NVidia drivers 331 installed and not being used, 
now have NVidia drivers 340 installed and enabled, and since they are exactly 
as buggy as version 331 (causing random inability to boot half of the times, 
and random screen freezes when using the touchpad), this is a major annoyance.
  
  An automatic update that breaks a working system has a bug, no matter
  what; and this is especially unquestionable if, whatever configuration
  that causes the system to break with the new update, was not the result
  of the user's tinkering and touching stuff he wasn't supposed to touch,
  but was just a configuration that at some point had been supported, and
  which had been established via the standard user interface provided in
  earlier versions of the system.
  
  This situation must be fixed without obliging the user to take any particular 
action.
  If that is not possible, then the next update should cause a popup message to 
be displayed, instructing the user about what to do if in order to (100% 
safely) disable or uninstall NVidia drivers if he needs to.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1485117

Title:
  Fix for #1431753 enables nVidia drivers even if formerly disabled,
  potentially breaking working systems

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