Note, with the current privacy regulations, if Canonical uses consent as
the base for submitting this information for collection, I am quite sure
it would be against the law to send IP address to a Canonical server
when consent is missing.   Sending IP address provides time, location
and the fact that a given version of Ubuntu is being installed to
Ubuntu, and every network sniffing entity on the way like NSA and GCHQ.
This set of information is by definition personal information, and by
combining the IP address with other sources it is often possible to
identify the individual uniquely (for example if the user uses Facebook,
log into her email etc). As consent is obviously missing if the user
declined to submit the information about his machine, Canonical would
have to come up with another basis for the collection.  It would be hard
to argue it is vital for the operation of the service provided, one of
the other options for data collection.  It is probably a good idea to
check out the GDPR provisions available, to reduce the chance of a large
fine.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1761739

Title:
  Submits a message to a remote server even when "No, don't send any
  info" is selected

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