@Blisterexe@citizenserious Because something else you have installed via flatpak has it listed as a dependency.
flatpak list --app --columns=application,runtime
This should tell you the deps I believe. I had this happen with Master PDF Reader's flatpak. It depended on very old libs. I removed the reader package which yanked the dep as well, then just installed the app another way. Not all apps are packaged by the project and sometimes are slow to update or get abandoned..
@hayes@be4foss It means you become a security risk. But as long as you don't put that laptop on the Internet with that old version OSX then you should be good, otherwise ... Linux the thing and use it until whenever. ;)
@tkk13909@YamiYuki Because people like to do that, it gives them some sense of power that they really don't possess. I wouldn't care that much about it if I were you.
@possiblylinux127@wisha And how would sandboxing a malicious script inside a theme that is supposed to change the look of your desktop work? They installed and ran something that rm'd their home directory. I'm honestly curious how you'd solve this.
@KISSmyOS@WheelcharArtist It does. I just wish I could figure out why in Gnome that I click on FF on desktop 1 and it jumps to desktop 5. So annoying. heh. :D
@ColdWater Same for me. I think it's a bug in 6.3.x as I tried several icon packs with the same weird result.