Linux Weekly News - GNOME Foundation issues, AUR under attack, Firefox's big plans


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Timestamps:
00:00 Intro
00:42 Sponsor: SquareSpace
02:01 GNOME Foundation issues and lack of transparency
09:34 AUR compromised with malware and spam
12:57 Mozilla shares big Firefox roadmap
15:54 X11 server rewritten using Rust and AI
17:33 Linux kernel 7.1 released
19:03 Chrome removes manifest v2 support entirely
20:39 Firefox for Android will rely on Google Play integrity API
22:29 Plasma 6.7 released
24:27 SonicDE forks KDE into an X11 desktop
26:24 More details on Ubuntu's AI features
28:21 The EU won't stop killing videogames
31:06 Sponsor: Tuxedo oOmputers

Links:

GNOME Foundation issues and lack of transparency
discourse.gnome.org/t/2026-boa…

AUR compromised with malware and spam
sonatype.com/blog/atomic-arch-…
linuxiac.com/yay-13-0-adds-new…
phoronix.com/news/Arch-Linux-A…

Mozilla shares big Firefox roadmap
blog.mozilla.org/en/firefox/fi…
firefox.com/en-US/whatsnext/

X11 server rewritten using Rust and AI
itsfoss.com/news/yserver/

Linux kernel 7.1 released
phoronix.com/review/linux-71-f…

Chrome removes manifest v2 support entirely
linuxiac.com/chrome-closes-ano…

Firefox for Android will rely on Google Play integrity API
omgubuntu.co.uk/2026/06/mozill…

Plasma 6.7 released
youtu.be/5qJSapprdSQ

SonicDE forks KDE into an X11 desktop
itsfoss.com/sonicde-x11-kde-pl…

More details on Ubuntu's AI features
discourse.ubuntu.com/t/introdu…

The EU won't stop killing videogames
gamingonlinux.com/2026/06/euro…

This entry was edited (today, 8:36 AM)

KDE 6.7 / Wayland: I love being able to configure different panels and dedicated widgets on my secondary screen


I recently added a secondary TV to my PC with KDE setup, in addition to the main monitor. I have it on a different position and angle and only turn it on for certain use cases, watching from different place. And I love the fact that I can create and build a dedicated panel with the widgets I want to have on that screen only. I don't need every panel and functionality on that screen.

Just curious, is this something Microsoft Windows users can actually do? If not, this is something I would "advertise" for Linux.

Anyone using MX Linux?


I got tired of LMDE and am a longtime lover of XFCE (though haven’t used it in years) and I gotta say this is a distro that feels like a distinct distro for once. Comes with an amazing set of tools__ the way OpenSUSE does, especially the GUI package manager and the ability to make a bootable live ISO of your running system. Definitely not your normal Debian derivative IMO. Definitely a distro I slept on for a long time. Choice of init system too is chefs kiss for all the systemD haters. The antiX foundation is nice too as I agree on their values 100%, but that distro is too minimal for my needs.

Open-Source NVIDIA NVK Vulkan Driver Now Supports DLSS


A Rambling Linux History Tidbit


Fair Warning: Long Linux nerd rambling ahead.

I actually was responding to another post where someone revealed to another that Linux is not free of corporate influence. I started to write out this spiraling drawl and realized it had nothing to do with the OP, but thought maybe someone else might find it interesting here.

Feel free to correct me should I have some details wrong, I wrote this off the cuff.


The history of Linux is inreresting, but just remember, Linux "won" in some senses just like how Windows, Apple, Intel, etc. "won" their respective domains. Microsoft "won" corporate desktop and office tooling ecosystems. Apple "won" the consumer computing and personal devices (tablet/phone) ecosystems. Linux "won" the servers ecosystem. And the history of how that happened is just as interesting as the fabled stories as to how Microsoft or Apple came to prominence today.

The only reason new Linux users are sometimes caught off guard by the fact that Linux is highly influenced by corporate entities is because they haven't looked into the tumultuous and messy, but very interesting, history of UNIX, Linux, GNU, BSD, and others.

What follows is not entirely related, but take this example of how Linux ended up, perhaps by sheer luck, to have ended up as one of the dominant surviving UNIX-like OSes today:

Take the 1992 lawsuit by UNIX System Laboratories vs BSD. One might say, okay, but what does this have to do with Linux? Well Linus Torvalds created Linux in 1991. BSD had been around since 1978, and had been gaining considerable popularity during the 1980s. BSD has its own messy history, but the short of the long of it is that Bell Labs allowed UNIX to be utilized, researched, and modified by Universities, which resulted in an explosion of UNIX derivative OSes (distributions), including one Berkeley School Distribution, or BSD. During this time period, the attempts to standardize UNIX by vendors resulted in what came to be known as The UNIX wars. It was in the culmination of these "wars" that aforementioned lawsuit occurred, during which BSD development was ground to a halt (eventually forks of BSD like the ones you see today are the sole inheritors of the BSD family of OSes). This was during the same time the Linux Kernel and the GNU OS would come onto the scene and essentially eat BSD's cake.

In essence, were it not for the timing of this lawsuit (which you can view as unfortunate or serendipitous depending on your views of BSD vs Linux), we might all be talking about BSD the way we talk about Linux today. Maybe, even then that's highly speculative.

EDIT: Removed repetitive wording.

This entry was edited (yesterday, 6:27 PM)

SteamOS Linux 3.8 released as stable


Why are so many Linux projects on Microsoft GitHub? Shouldn't they all move to Codeberg?


Sure, I know a lot of projects have been on GH since before MS bought it, but they've owned it for quite a while now, so we really should be seeing better migration out by now, no?

Codeberg is nonprofit which seems more in the spirit of the Linux ecosystem overall. GH is for-profit...