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    Opera automatically updating from version 22 to 23 without my knowledge or permission

    Opera for Windows
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    • A Former User
      A Former User last edited by

      when a website continually changes their code "unannounced", it affects only their website and those choosing to visit it - not my system/software functions nor other websites I may choose to visit.
      When Opera changes their code "unannounced", it affects only their browser and those choosing to use it. Websites are software with functions too, there are web apps, etc. Also, it's very possible leaving Opera outdated will affect websites' functions in the same way or worse than code changes in the new version. 🙂

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      • Deleted User
        Deleted User last edited by

        when a website continually changes their code "unannounced", it affects only their website and those choosing to visit it - not my system/software functions nor other websites I may choose to visit.
        When Opera changes their code "unannounced", it affects only their browser and those choosing to use it. Websites are software with functions too, there are web apps, etc. Also, it's very possible leaving Opera outdated will affect websites' functions in the same way or worse than code changes in the new version. 🙂

        So the best thing to do is update 🙂

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        • sgunhouse
          sgunhouse Moderator Volunteer last edited by

          It would be nice if Opera at least announced major updates to the user. Security updates should probably be silent most of the time, but major updates can include some surprising new features ...

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          • lem729
            lem729 last edited by

            I didn't notice it till someone mentioned it. Then I noticed the change in the heart feature in the right end of the address bar. I think they should announce it.

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            • blackbird71
              blackbird71 last edited by

              When Opera changes their code "unannounced", it affects only their browser and those choosing to use it. Websites are software with functions too, there are web apps, etc. Also, it's very possible leaving Opera outdated will affect websites' functions in the same way or worse than code changes in the new version. 🙂

              So when does it start to matter? A website coding change potentially affects user interaction with only one site. A browser change potentially affects interaction with all the sites the user visits, or perhaps all the sites using a particular technology (eg Flash, etc).

              In any case, what I was responding to in my original statement was @leocg's mention that "(almost) all software will" update with small and silent updates in the near future. If that is an accurate prediction, the software on a user's system will then be auto-updating at all manner of times, and the problems (yes, there WILL be problems) will pop up out of the blue leaving a user mystified as to what suddenly started causing them. I believe a wise user stays in touch with his system's configuration at any given time. That means he either manually updates software or has his updates occur on a scheduled basis so that he can determine more quickly what caused a sudden-appearing problem. Moreover, it allows him to stay abreast of other users' problems with a given update before committing his system to it, so that he can avoid it if the other users' problems matter to him.

              An all-too-common offender of this sort currently are antivirus updates, most of which are silent (at least for signatures, and in many cases for program files), and some of which have a track record of sometimes breaking things. If "all" software moves in the silent-update direction, then chaos will indeed reign when a problem suddenly pops up in using a system or any software on it. Did the user get hacked? Was it a browser update? A Flash update? An OS update? An extension update? a hardware failure/intermittent? An AV update? Something the user did wrong? There's no user-evident trail of configuration changes and when they occurred... just that a problem suddenly appeared. Hence my earlier comment.

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              • myopera23
                myopera23 last edited by

                Very succinctly put! Nothing wrong with O silently updating bug or security fixes, but updating to a new version of O with new features potentially add new problems.

                I don't want to be a guinea pig to test the latest version of O. O22 updated to O23 without my knowledge or permission, and that resulted in taskbar problems(see 'Opera always in foreground' thread).

                Certainly it can be argued that this is a way to improve security by forcefully and universally removing software holes and flaws as they are revealed, patched, and updates pushed. But that comes at a great 'instability' cost, particularly to technically-informed users who stay abreast of security issues, run "tight" systems, employ layered security, and strive to keep their systems "stable" above all else. The answer is to give users control over if/when software on a system updates itself.
                The reality is that every single piece of software has bugs, including every update. A user sometimes has to thread through a minefield of software incompatibilities and hiccups to get a system fully stabilized and smoothly running. An update invariably introduces different software behavior at some point or another that may or may not be evident as a conflict or problem. When a user performs a manual update, has a known scheduled update, or receives a clear and prominent alert that an update has occurred, he at least has a definitive starting point to troubleshoot any performance hiccups that may be the consequence of the update. With silent, forced updates, the user has no starting point for figuring out why things broke on his system - and the more software that pushes auto-updates, the greater the likelihood both that something will be broken by an update and that it will be unclear what its cause is.

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                • A Former User
                  A Former User last edited by admin

                  See also here -
                  https://forums.opera.com/topic/4100/enforced-automatic-updates/1

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                  • myopera23
                    myopera23 last edited by

                    This is the way Opera will work from now on, with small and silent updates.

                    I'd say that updating an entire version of O is not a small event. 🙂

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                    • Deleted User
                      Deleted User last edited by

                      This is the way Opera will work from now on, with small and silent updates.

                      I'd say that updating an entire version of O is not a small event. 🙂

                      Indeed

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                      • Deleted User
                        Deleted User last edited by

                        Always fighting. Always bickering about this point or that one. Everyone seems to have his opinion and readily defends it against all comers. Ah... pride is such a hard thing to relinquish. I'm right... you're wrong... so there!

                        Okay, I'll express my opinion as well (might as well). I agree with lem that notification of an upgrade should be provided BUT I'm not going to make this a deal-breaker as some have declared.

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                        • lem729
                          lem729 last edited by

                          I not that worried about the permission thing, other than, if you've changed features, let people know. It shows the browser is being worked on. And maybe I'll find the new features helpful. Indeed, if I"m aware of them I might use them. 🙂 By the way, on the "heart" features at the right of the address bar, I discovered if you go into Opera://flags, you can change that feature and go back to what was before by disabling it. I'm just mentioning that in case any users are unhappy with the change. For me, it's okay.

                          On about Opera, under browser identification, you get the following: "Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/36.0.1985.125 Safari/537.36 OPR/23.0.1522.60." Now that probably was what was there before, but it does have me puzzling, now that I'm focusing on it. Does anyone know why that's there? I mean if you're not using the User-Agent Switcher extension, I thought the browser automatically identifies as Opera.

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                          • leocg
                            leocg Moderator Volunteer last edited by

                            It would be nice if Opera at least announced major updates to the user.

                            Maybe bt showing a page with the changelog? I think it could be interesting.

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                            • sgunhouse
                              sgunhouse Moderator Volunteer last edited by

                              Opera Presto always showed the Welcome to Opera page, but the blog post or changelog would be more informative.

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                              • leocg
                                leocg Moderator Volunteer last edited by

                                On about Opera, under browser identification, you get the following: "Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/36.0.1985.125 Safari/537.36 OPR/23.0.1522.60." Now that probably was what was there before, but it does have me puzzling, now that I'm focusing on it. Does anyone know why that's there? I mean if you're not using the User-Agent Switcher extension, I thought the browser automatically identifies as Opera.

                                It's for compatibility and have been that way since Opera 15 iirc. What identifies it as Opera is the OPR/build part.

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                                • sgunhouse
                                  sgunhouse Moderator Volunteer last edited by

                                  Ever seen the user agent in Chrome? Yeah, looks a lot like that.

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                                  • burkeknight
                                    burkeknight last edited by

                                    Auto update without permission, opening the browser automatically when doing so, is plain wrong. I also will stop using opera.
                                    Also, your reply text area on this forum, reverts to smaller than one line when typing, making it hard to see what ytou are typing.

                                    Seems to me, opera needs to work on their customer relations, and the fact that auto-anything is being frowned upon now due to malware, etc. The also need to get a better community forum program.

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                                    • myopera23
                                      myopera23 last edited by

                                      Ok thanks. I'll just reinstall O22 and block autoupdate.exe.

                                      It's no good. 'opera_autoupdate.exe' blocked, but O22 still manages to upgrade to O23. Even after reinstalling O22 whilst 'opera_autoupdate.exe' was already blocked.

                                      Time to switch to Firefox/chrome. Shame, O22 was way more compatible with the websites I frequent than any other version.

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                                      • myopera23
                                        myopera23 last edited by

                                        Forgot to ask how to export bookmarks in O23? If I remember correctly, there was an option to export bookmarks to an html file in previous versions.

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                                        • christoph142
                                          christoph142 last edited by

                                          Why would you wanna keep an outdated version (unless you're on Windows 7 and experiencing this bloody Auto-hide bug)?

                                          (You can start Opera with the
                                          --disable-update
                                          command line switch. But remember to remove it again when it's not necessary anymore to prevent ending up with outdated versions.)

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                                          • A Former User
                                            A Former User last edited by admin

                                            Why would you wanna keep an outdated version (unless you're on Windows 7 and experiencing this bloody Auto-hide bug)?
                                            There's no point, there's even a workaround for it: https://forums.opera.com/post/45986

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