** Description changed:

  Ubuntu reelase:
  Ubuntu 18.04.5 LTS
  
  The version of the package:
  ```
  $ apt-cache policy fwupd
  fwupd:
-   Installed: 1.2.10-1ubuntu2~ubuntu18.04.5
-   Candidate: 1.2.10-1ubuntu2~ubuntu18.04.5
-   Version table:
-  *** 1.2.10-1ubuntu2~ubuntu18.04.5 500
-         500 http://de.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic-updates/main amd64 
Packages
-         500 http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic-security/main amd64 
Packages
-         100 /var/lib/dpkg/status
-      1.0.6-2 500
-         500 http://de.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic/main amd64 Packages
+   Installed: 1.2.10-1ubuntu2~ubuntu18.04.5
+   Candidate: 1.2.10-1ubuntu2~ubuntu18.04.5
+   Version table:
+  *** 1.2.10-1ubuntu2~ubuntu18.04.5 500
+         500 http://de.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic-updates/main amd64 
Packages
+         500 http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic-security/main amd64 
Packages
+         100 /var/lib/dpkg/status
+      1.0.6-2 500
+         500 http://de.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic/main amd64 Packages
  ```
  
  What expected to happen:
  No firmware updates suggested.
  
  What happened instead:
- On an LG laptop (which is not mine, model name 14ZD970-GX70K), the software 
update suggests updating the system firmware named "14ZD970-GX70K System 
Firmware" (version 1.21.37898) to the wrong one, "ThinkPad X1 Yoga 3rd 
Corporate ME Update" (version 184.80.3746). After confirming the update, the 
laptop restarted, went into the firmware update mode, and then stuck on it 
forever. After force rebooting the machine, (thankfully) it was returned back 
to the normal Ubuntu session.
+ On an LG laptop (which is not mine, model name 14ZD970-GX70K), the software 
update suggests updating the system firmware to the wrong one, "ThinkPad X1 
Yoga 3rd Corporate ME Update" (version 184.80.3746). This would be a bug of 
'fwupd', since the snap 'gnome-firmware' suggests that the wrong firmware is 
one of the releases of the current system firmware, which is named 
"14ZD970-GX70K System Firmware" (version 1.21.37898). After confirming the 
update, the laptop restarted, went into the firmware update mode, and then 
stuck on it forever. After force rebooting the machine, (thankfully) it was 
returned back to the normal Ubuntu session.

** Description changed:

- Ubuntu reelase:
+ Ubuntu release:
  Ubuntu 18.04.5 LTS
  
  The version of the package:
  ```
  $ apt-cache policy fwupd
  fwupd:
    Installed: 1.2.10-1ubuntu2~ubuntu18.04.5
    Candidate: 1.2.10-1ubuntu2~ubuntu18.04.5
    Version table:
   *** 1.2.10-1ubuntu2~ubuntu18.04.5 500
          500 http://de.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic-updates/main amd64 
Packages
          500 http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic-security/main amd64 
Packages
          100 /var/lib/dpkg/status
       1.0.6-2 500
          500 http://de.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic/main amd64 Packages
  ```
  
  What expected to happen:
  No firmware updates suggested.
  
  What happened instead:
  On an LG laptop (which is not mine, model name 14ZD970-GX70K), the software 
update suggests updating the system firmware to the wrong one, "ThinkPad X1 
Yoga 3rd Corporate ME Update" (version 184.80.3746). This would be a bug of 
'fwupd', since the snap 'gnome-firmware' suggests that the wrong firmware is 
one of the releases of the current system firmware, which is named 
"14ZD970-GX70K System Firmware" (version 1.21.37898). After confirming the 
update, the laptop restarted, went into the firmware update mode, and then 
stuck on it forever. After force rebooting the machine, (thankfully) it was 
returned back to the normal Ubuntu session.

** Description changed:

  Ubuntu release:
  Ubuntu 18.04.5 LTS
  
  The version of the package:
  ```
  $ apt-cache policy fwupd
  fwupd:
    Installed: 1.2.10-1ubuntu2~ubuntu18.04.5
    Candidate: 1.2.10-1ubuntu2~ubuntu18.04.5
    Version table:
   *** 1.2.10-1ubuntu2~ubuntu18.04.5 500
          500 http://de.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic-updates/main amd64 
Packages
          500 http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic-security/main amd64 
Packages
          100 /var/lib/dpkg/status
       1.0.6-2 500
          500 http://de.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic/main amd64 Packages
  ```
  
  What expected to happen:
  No firmware updates suggested.
  
  What happened instead:
- On an LG laptop (which is not mine, model name 14ZD970-GX70K), the software 
update suggests updating the system firmware to the wrong one, "ThinkPad X1 
Yoga 3rd Corporate ME Update" (version 184.80.3746). This would be a bug of 
'fwupd', since the snap 'gnome-firmware' suggests that the wrong firmware is 
one of the releases of the current system firmware, which is named 
"14ZD970-GX70K System Firmware" (version 1.21.37898). After confirming the 
update, the laptop restarted, went into the firmware update mode, and then 
stuck on it forever. After force rebooting the machine, (thankfully) it was 
returned back to the normal Ubuntu session.
+ On an LG laptop (which is not mine, model name 14ZD970-GX70K), the software 
update suggests updating the system firmware to the wrong one, "ThinkPad X1 
Yoga 3rd Corporate ME Update" (version 184.80.3746). This would be a bug of 
'fwupd', since the snap 'gnome-firmware' suggests the wrong firmware is one of 
the releases of the current system firmware, which is named "14ZD970-GX70K 
System Firmware" (version 1.21.37898). After confirming the update, the laptop 
restarted, went into the firmware update mode, and then stuck on it forever. 
After force rebooting the machine, (thankfully) it was returned back to the 
normal Ubuntu session.

** Description changed:

  Ubuntu release:
  Ubuntu 18.04.5 LTS
  
  The version of the package:
  ```
  $ apt-cache policy fwupd
  fwupd:
    Installed: 1.2.10-1ubuntu2~ubuntu18.04.5
    Candidate: 1.2.10-1ubuntu2~ubuntu18.04.5
    Version table:
   *** 1.2.10-1ubuntu2~ubuntu18.04.5 500
          500 http://de.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic-updates/main amd64 
Packages
          500 http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic-security/main amd64 
Packages
          100 /var/lib/dpkg/status
       1.0.6-2 500
          500 http://de.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic/main amd64 Packages
  ```
  
  What expected to happen:
  No firmware updates suggested.
  
  What happened instead:
- On an LG laptop (which is not mine, model name 14ZD970-GX70K), the software 
update suggests updating the system firmware to the wrong one, "ThinkPad X1 
Yoga 3rd Corporate ME Update" (version 184.80.3746). This would be a bug of 
'fwupd', since the snap 'gnome-firmware' suggests the wrong firmware is one of 
the releases of the current system firmware, which is named "14ZD970-GX70K 
System Firmware" (version 1.21.37898). After confirming the update, the laptop 
restarted, went into the firmware update mode, and then stuck on it forever. 
After force rebooting the machine, (thankfully) it was returned back to the 
normal Ubuntu session.
+ On an LG laptop (which is not mine, model name 14ZD970-GX70K), the software 
update suggests updating the system firmware to the wrong one, "ThinkPad X1 
Yoga 3rd Corporate ME Update" (version 184.80.3746). This would be a bug of 
'fwupd', since the snap 'gnome-firmware' suggests the wrong firmware as one of 
the releases of the current system firmware, which is named "14ZD970-GX70K 
System Firmware" (version 1.21.37898). After confirming the update, the laptop 
restarted, went into the firmware update mode, and then stuck on it forever. 
After force rebooting the machine, (thankfully) it was returned back to the 
normal Ubuntu session.

** Description changed:

  Ubuntu release:
  Ubuntu 18.04.5 LTS
  
  The version of the package:
  ```
  $ apt-cache policy fwupd
  fwupd:
    Installed: 1.2.10-1ubuntu2~ubuntu18.04.5
    Candidate: 1.2.10-1ubuntu2~ubuntu18.04.5
    Version table:
   *** 1.2.10-1ubuntu2~ubuntu18.04.5 500
          500 http://de.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic-updates/main amd64 
Packages
          500 http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic-security/main amd64 
Packages
          100 /var/lib/dpkg/status
       1.0.6-2 500
          500 http://de.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic/main amd64 Packages
  ```
  
  What expected to happen:
  No firmware updates suggested.
  
  What happened instead:
- On an LG laptop (which is not mine, model name 14ZD970-GX70K), the software 
update suggests updating the system firmware to the wrong one, "ThinkPad X1 
Yoga 3rd Corporate ME Update" (version 184.80.3746). This would be a bug of 
'fwupd', since the snap 'gnome-firmware' suggests the wrong firmware as one of 
the releases of the current system firmware, which is named "14ZD970-GX70K 
System Firmware" (version 1.21.37898). After confirming the update, the laptop 
restarted, went into the firmware update mode, and then stuck on it forever. 
After force rebooting the machine, (thankfully) it was returned back to the 
normal Ubuntu session.
+ On an LG laptop (which is not mine, model name 14ZD970-GX70K), the software 
update suggests updating the system firmware to the wrong one, "ThinkPad X1 
Yoga 3rd Corporate ME Update" (version 184.80.3746). This would be a bug of 
'fwupd', since the snap 'gnome-firmware' suggests the wrong firmware as one of 
the releases of the current system firmware "14ZD970-GX70K System Firmware" 
(version 1.21.37898). After confirming the update, the laptop restarted, went 
into the firmware update mode, and then stuck on it forever. After force 
rebooting the machine, (thankfully) it was returned back to the normal Ubuntu 
session.

** Description changed:

  Ubuntu release:
  Ubuntu 18.04.5 LTS
  
  The version of the package:
  ```
  $ apt-cache policy fwupd
  fwupd:
    Installed: 1.2.10-1ubuntu2~ubuntu18.04.5
    Candidate: 1.2.10-1ubuntu2~ubuntu18.04.5
    Version table:
   *** 1.2.10-1ubuntu2~ubuntu18.04.5 500
          500 http://de.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic-updates/main amd64 
Packages
          500 http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic-security/main amd64 
Packages
          100 /var/lib/dpkg/status
       1.0.6-2 500
          500 http://de.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic/main amd64 Packages
  ```
  
  What expected to happen:
  No firmware updates suggested.
  
  What happened instead:
- On an LG laptop (which is not mine, model name 14ZD970-GX70K), the software 
update suggests updating the system firmware to the wrong one, "ThinkPad X1 
Yoga 3rd Corporate ME Update" (version 184.80.3746). This would be a bug of 
'fwupd', since the snap 'gnome-firmware' suggests the wrong firmware as one of 
the releases of the current system firmware "14ZD970-GX70K System Firmware" 
(version 1.21.37898). After confirming the update, the laptop restarted, went 
into the firmware update mode, and then stuck on it forever. After force 
rebooting the machine, (thankfully) it was returned back to the normal Ubuntu 
session.
+ On an LG laptop (which is not mine, model name 14ZD970-GX70K), the software 
update suggests updating the system firmware to the wrong one, "ThinkPad X1 
Yoga 3rd Corporate ME Update" (version 184.80.3746). This would be a bug of 
'fwupd', since the snap 'gnome-firmware' also suggests the wrong firmware is 
one of the releases of the current system firmware "14ZD970-GX70K System 
Firmware" (version 1.21.37898). After confirming the update, the laptop 
restarted, went into the firmware update mode, and then stuck on it forever. 
After force rebooting the machine, (thankfully) it was returned back to the 
normal Ubuntu session.

-- 
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1916968

Title:
  fwupd suggests wrong firmware updates on LG gram laptop

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