Why aren't you using CloudReady?

Why aren't you using CloudReady?
It's the Chromium version of Chrome OS. Comes de-Googled, but with all of the benefits of Chrome OS, like:
>Extremely good security
>Stability
>A professional UI
>Sites won't target you as a Linux user, meaning you can access content like Widevine
>Very good optimization, it's designed to run on a $150 potato
It's based on Gentoo, completely free, and you can run Linux applications using Crostini. Why not use it, Any Forums?

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>chromeos
lol

>Extremely good security
this is the enemy of linux users, you should've learned this already

It has more market-share than Mac, running on the cheapest and shittiest laptops with no issue.
Yeah, I guess AUR malware is a key-part of Linux enjoyment. Still, ChromeOS hardly locks you down. It's opening up more and more over time, while still having good features like boot integrity, the Powerwash feature that lets you securely and instantly wipe everything clean, and sandboxing throughout the entire OS

>YOU WILL OWN NOTHING
>AND YOU WILL BE HAPPY
kill yourself schwab

>>Sites won't target you as a Linux user, meaning you can access content like Widevine
What? QRD?

Sites like Netflix, Prime Video, etc. have a system called Widevine DRM. People on Linux can't watch anything, even on their own account with an active subscription. There are workarounds you can do to get it to run at 480p, but that's it really.
No matter how much user-agent trickery you attempt, websites hate Linux and there's a lot of shit you just can't access while using it.
That said, people will say sites that do that aren't worth using, and I agree. But it's something worth mentioning.
Because Chrome OS has such a massive market share and is bought by normies, they allow and support it. It's literally the only Linux distro with this kind of ability.

what the fuck is this retarded shilling
you can install widevine and enable HDCP if you’re a retarded consoomer

That's not how Widevine works. Only whitelisted operating systems can pass.
Even MacOS occasionally has issues with Widevine after an update, because it's whitelist only.
It's not something you can just install, that would completely negate the purpose of it.
Sites like Netflix use it because they believe it's easier to rip content on Linux than other, whitelisted operating systems.

Jokes on them, I don't even get FHD on Windows.

>websites hate linux
Why do you think so? Genuinely curious

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No pajeet, this doesn’t exist.

Why would it be easier to rip netflix content from linux than windows for example? After all dont you access using a browser in both of them?

They hate Linux because of the freedom. Of course it goes against what a subscription service wants. They also realize Linux users have a higher chance of having the tech knowledge to rip content, so they lock it down. Similar to things like anti-cheat for games, it's just not a cat and mouse battle they want to sign up for.
It does. You can enable DRM content on Linux, but it will never be a high resolution, as I said.
There are sketchy browser plugins for Firefox that try to disguise you so you can get high resolutions, but they only work for a short period, and only on certain shows/movies.
This is because of Widevine.

It's not. But there's the potential for exploits, and given how few people use Linux, they don't want to invest in teams that deal with any possibilities of it. Remember, it's about the theoretical potential. These companies are all greedy and retarded, so they'll tell their developers to lock everything down at all costs.

>no proof

>my botnet is better than yours
no thanks, ill be sticking with the GNU operating system

It's not de-googled, google owns it too.

Yeah, they do, but they don't really have any involvement. They just provide support

>t.

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what makes this any better than a lightweight linux distro with chromium?
streaming services are terrible and switching useragent deals with most "incompatibilities" anyway