I agree that it's a pretty annoying and scary message (and incorrect -
"If a software program on your system has set enterprise policies that
affect how Chrome works, you’ll see this message—even if it’s not
fully managed by an organization."
https://www.howtogeek.com/410106/why-does-chrome-say
arthurweinber...@gmail.com wrote:
>
>Hi Mike,
>
>"Frightening" is my perspective on this.
>
>When an average user sees their chromium is suddenly "managed" by their
>organization and they know they are not part of any organization, then
>their first idea will be that they have been hacked. In my ca
Hi Mike,
"Frightening" is my perspective on this.
When an average user sees their chromium is suddenly "managed" by their
organization and they know they are not part of any organization, then
their first idea will be that they have been hacked. In my case I deleted
my entire chromium profile bef
It looks like the other way to do this is through
/etc/chromium/master_preferences, which will only take effect when
people first install and run chromium.
"search_provider_overrides": [{
"enabled": true,
"encoding": "UTF-8",
"favicon_url": "https://duckduckgo.com/favicon.ico";,
"n
Hi,
This change caused my chromium browser to report that it's being managed by
my "organization". I thought that my machine was somehow compromised. This
is terrifying! I wound up deleting my entire chromium profile before I
discovered that the root cause was this DuckDuckGo config change. Even i
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