Does anyone know if OcenAudio is Safe?





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I just installed OceanAudio to do simple audio editing tasks which Audacity makes very painful, disk-space intensive (1gb plus per hour) and therefore very slow. It is an awesome program which does not need online help and greets me with a "drop your files here" Awesome!



However, along the way, I got a message from gdebi which said that installing debs outside the the standard repo can be a security risk. With Skype and Opera (don't remind me about Opera's latest breach of data), I don't care and trust they will be OK. However, I know nothing of OceanAudio.



I was wondering what people know about it, and what type of security risks I am looking at with OceanAudio or anything else I might install. For Instance, can someone trap my keystrokes and get Internet Passwords?










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    Don't you mean ocenaudio?

    – Jonathan
    5 hours ago


















4















I just installed OceanAudio to do simple audio editing tasks which Audacity makes very painful, disk-space intensive (1gb plus per hour) and therefore very slow. It is an awesome program which does not need online help and greets me with a "drop your files here" Awesome!



However, along the way, I got a message from gdebi which said that installing debs outside the the standard repo can be a security risk. With Skype and Opera (don't remind me about Opera's latest breach of data), I don't care and trust they will be OK. However, I know nothing of OceanAudio.



I was wondering what people know about it, and what type of security risks I am looking at with OceanAudio or anything else I might install. For Instance, can someone trap my keystrokes and get Internet Passwords?










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    Don't you mean ocenaudio?

    – Jonathan
    5 hours ago














4












4








4








I just installed OceanAudio to do simple audio editing tasks which Audacity makes very painful, disk-space intensive (1gb plus per hour) and therefore very slow. It is an awesome program which does not need online help and greets me with a "drop your files here" Awesome!



However, along the way, I got a message from gdebi which said that installing debs outside the the standard repo can be a security risk. With Skype and Opera (don't remind me about Opera's latest breach of data), I don't care and trust they will be OK. However, I know nothing of OceanAudio.



I was wondering what people know about it, and what type of security risks I am looking at with OceanAudio or anything else I might install. For Instance, can someone trap my keystrokes and get Internet Passwords?










share|improve this question
















I just installed OceanAudio to do simple audio editing tasks which Audacity makes very painful, disk-space intensive (1gb plus per hour) and therefore very slow. It is an awesome program which does not need online help and greets me with a "drop your files here" Awesome!



However, along the way, I got a message from gdebi which said that installing debs outside the the standard repo can be a security risk. With Skype and Opera (don't remind me about Opera's latest breach of data), I don't care and trust they will be OK. However, I know nothing of OceanAudio.



I was wondering what people know about it, and what type of security risks I am looking at with OceanAudio or anything else I might install. For Instance, can someone trap my keystrokes and get Internet Passwords?







security audacity gdebi






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 1 hour ago







Bhikkhu Subhuti

















asked Sep 4 '16 at 3:36









Bhikkhu SubhutiBhikkhu Subhuti

472419




472419








  • 1





    Don't you mean ocenaudio?

    – Jonathan
    5 hours ago














  • 1





    Don't you mean ocenaudio?

    – Jonathan
    5 hours ago








1




1





Don't you mean ocenaudio?

– Jonathan
5 hours ago





Don't you mean ocenaudio?

– Jonathan
5 hours ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















5














There are three decent options when installing applications under Ubuntu, in order of safety:




  1. In an ideal world you would be safest by only installing applications that have come through the Ubuntu Repositories. These have usually been tested comprehensively and have usually been well packaged.

  2. However not all applications are packaged and available in this way. The next safest method is to find the source code of a proven application and compile and package it yourself. However this requires some expertise and a degree of fiddling around that many users are not prepared to undertake.

  3. The final safe option is to install a package from outside the Ubuntu system which may come from:


    • A PPA (Personal Package Archive). There are some risks inherent in using just any PPA and you should do some homework first.

    • A deb package from the developer's website. Now gdebi rightly warns of the risks inherent in the installation of deb packages from such websites and you should do some homework first.




The 'homework' in point 3 varies from application to application. In the case of OcenAudio a Google search will show that it is a well established application that has received positive reviews and certainly no reports of captured key strokes or lost passwords.



My own personal review may also help out here as I have installed OcenAudio on a 64bit Xenial system as follows:



wget http://www.ocenaudio.com/downloads/index.php/ocenaudio_debian64.deb
sudo dpkg -i ocenaudio_debian64.deb
sudo apt-get -f install


I have tested it comprehensively and it runs well with no security risks that I could see. Nice application too:



enter image description here



So my personal recommendation: do some further research on Ocenaudio, add my own thoughts to your research and then install and enjoy this great application :)



References:




  • Lifehacker: Ocenaudio Is a Free, Fast, Streamlined Audio Editor

  • Betanews: ocenaudio is an outstanding audio editor






share|improve this answer


























  • Thanks for you answer. Yes, I had installed it anyway. However.. I was wondering if there are levels of permissions that a program can have (like in Android).

    – Bhikkhu Subhuti
    Sep 7 '16 at 9:23











  • I gave information to OceanAudio on how to become a canonical partner. I think Skype is not open source, but they are a partner.

    – Bhikkhu Subhuti
    Sep 7 '16 at 22:35











  • @BhikkhuSubhuti It would be easier for everybody if there was an OcenAudio packager for either Debian or Ubuntu. Downloading from a formal Ubuntu Repository would make everyone happier :)

    – andrew.46
    Sep 7 '16 at 22:37











  • Ocean audio is available in Deb format on the website.

    – Bhikkhu Subhuti
    Sep 7 '16 at 22:52












Your Answer








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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









5














There are three decent options when installing applications under Ubuntu, in order of safety:




  1. In an ideal world you would be safest by only installing applications that have come through the Ubuntu Repositories. These have usually been tested comprehensively and have usually been well packaged.

  2. However not all applications are packaged and available in this way. The next safest method is to find the source code of a proven application and compile and package it yourself. However this requires some expertise and a degree of fiddling around that many users are not prepared to undertake.

  3. The final safe option is to install a package from outside the Ubuntu system which may come from:


    • A PPA (Personal Package Archive). There are some risks inherent in using just any PPA and you should do some homework first.

    • A deb package from the developer's website. Now gdebi rightly warns of the risks inherent in the installation of deb packages from such websites and you should do some homework first.




The 'homework' in point 3 varies from application to application. In the case of OcenAudio a Google search will show that it is a well established application that has received positive reviews and certainly no reports of captured key strokes or lost passwords.



My own personal review may also help out here as I have installed OcenAudio on a 64bit Xenial system as follows:



wget http://www.ocenaudio.com/downloads/index.php/ocenaudio_debian64.deb
sudo dpkg -i ocenaudio_debian64.deb
sudo apt-get -f install


I have tested it comprehensively and it runs well with no security risks that I could see. Nice application too:



enter image description here



So my personal recommendation: do some further research on Ocenaudio, add my own thoughts to your research and then install and enjoy this great application :)



References:




  • Lifehacker: Ocenaudio Is a Free, Fast, Streamlined Audio Editor

  • Betanews: ocenaudio is an outstanding audio editor






share|improve this answer


























  • Thanks for you answer. Yes, I had installed it anyway. However.. I was wondering if there are levels of permissions that a program can have (like in Android).

    – Bhikkhu Subhuti
    Sep 7 '16 at 9:23











  • I gave information to OceanAudio on how to become a canonical partner. I think Skype is not open source, but they are a partner.

    – Bhikkhu Subhuti
    Sep 7 '16 at 22:35











  • @BhikkhuSubhuti It would be easier for everybody if there was an OcenAudio packager for either Debian or Ubuntu. Downloading from a formal Ubuntu Repository would make everyone happier :)

    – andrew.46
    Sep 7 '16 at 22:37











  • Ocean audio is available in Deb format on the website.

    – Bhikkhu Subhuti
    Sep 7 '16 at 22:52
















5














There are three decent options when installing applications under Ubuntu, in order of safety:




  1. In an ideal world you would be safest by only installing applications that have come through the Ubuntu Repositories. These have usually been tested comprehensively and have usually been well packaged.

  2. However not all applications are packaged and available in this way. The next safest method is to find the source code of a proven application and compile and package it yourself. However this requires some expertise and a degree of fiddling around that many users are not prepared to undertake.

  3. The final safe option is to install a package from outside the Ubuntu system which may come from:


    • A PPA (Personal Package Archive). There are some risks inherent in using just any PPA and you should do some homework first.

    • A deb package from the developer's website. Now gdebi rightly warns of the risks inherent in the installation of deb packages from such websites and you should do some homework first.




The 'homework' in point 3 varies from application to application. In the case of OcenAudio a Google search will show that it is a well established application that has received positive reviews and certainly no reports of captured key strokes or lost passwords.



My own personal review may also help out here as I have installed OcenAudio on a 64bit Xenial system as follows:



wget http://www.ocenaudio.com/downloads/index.php/ocenaudio_debian64.deb
sudo dpkg -i ocenaudio_debian64.deb
sudo apt-get -f install


I have tested it comprehensively and it runs well with no security risks that I could see. Nice application too:



enter image description here



So my personal recommendation: do some further research on Ocenaudio, add my own thoughts to your research and then install and enjoy this great application :)



References:




  • Lifehacker: Ocenaudio Is a Free, Fast, Streamlined Audio Editor

  • Betanews: ocenaudio is an outstanding audio editor






share|improve this answer


























  • Thanks for you answer. Yes, I had installed it anyway. However.. I was wondering if there are levels of permissions that a program can have (like in Android).

    – Bhikkhu Subhuti
    Sep 7 '16 at 9:23











  • I gave information to OceanAudio on how to become a canonical partner. I think Skype is not open source, but they are a partner.

    – Bhikkhu Subhuti
    Sep 7 '16 at 22:35











  • @BhikkhuSubhuti It would be easier for everybody if there was an OcenAudio packager for either Debian or Ubuntu. Downloading from a formal Ubuntu Repository would make everyone happier :)

    – andrew.46
    Sep 7 '16 at 22:37











  • Ocean audio is available in Deb format on the website.

    – Bhikkhu Subhuti
    Sep 7 '16 at 22:52














5












5








5







There are three decent options when installing applications under Ubuntu, in order of safety:




  1. In an ideal world you would be safest by only installing applications that have come through the Ubuntu Repositories. These have usually been tested comprehensively and have usually been well packaged.

  2. However not all applications are packaged and available in this way. The next safest method is to find the source code of a proven application and compile and package it yourself. However this requires some expertise and a degree of fiddling around that many users are not prepared to undertake.

  3. The final safe option is to install a package from outside the Ubuntu system which may come from:


    • A PPA (Personal Package Archive). There are some risks inherent in using just any PPA and you should do some homework first.

    • A deb package from the developer's website. Now gdebi rightly warns of the risks inherent in the installation of deb packages from such websites and you should do some homework first.




The 'homework' in point 3 varies from application to application. In the case of OcenAudio a Google search will show that it is a well established application that has received positive reviews and certainly no reports of captured key strokes or lost passwords.



My own personal review may also help out here as I have installed OcenAudio on a 64bit Xenial system as follows:



wget http://www.ocenaudio.com/downloads/index.php/ocenaudio_debian64.deb
sudo dpkg -i ocenaudio_debian64.deb
sudo apt-get -f install


I have tested it comprehensively and it runs well with no security risks that I could see. Nice application too:



enter image description here



So my personal recommendation: do some further research on Ocenaudio, add my own thoughts to your research and then install and enjoy this great application :)



References:




  • Lifehacker: Ocenaudio Is a Free, Fast, Streamlined Audio Editor

  • Betanews: ocenaudio is an outstanding audio editor






share|improve this answer















There are three decent options when installing applications under Ubuntu, in order of safety:




  1. In an ideal world you would be safest by only installing applications that have come through the Ubuntu Repositories. These have usually been tested comprehensively and have usually been well packaged.

  2. However not all applications are packaged and available in this way. The next safest method is to find the source code of a proven application and compile and package it yourself. However this requires some expertise and a degree of fiddling around that many users are not prepared to undertake.

  3. The final safe option is to install a package from outside the Ubuntu system which may come from:


    • A PPA (Personal Package Archive). There are some risks inherent in using just any PPA and you should do some homework first.

    • A deb package from the developer's website. Now gdebi rightly warns of the risks inherent in the installation of deb packages from such websites and you should do some homework first.




The 'homework' in point 3 varies from application to application. In the case of OcenAudio a Google search will show that it is a well established application that has received positive reviews and certainly no reports of captured key strokes or lost passwords.



My own personal review may also help out here as I have installed OcenAudio on a 64bit Xenial system as follows:



wget http://www.ocenaudio.com/downloads/index.php/ocenaudio_debian64.deb
sudo dpkg -i ocenaudio_debian64.deb
sudo apt-get -f install


I have tested it comprehensively and it runs well with no security risks that I could see. Nice application too:



enter image description here



So my personal recommendation: do some further research on Ocenaudio, add my own thoughts to your research and then install and enjoy this great application :)



References:




  • Lifehacker: Ocenaudio Is a Free, Fast, Streamlined Audio Editor

  • Betanews: ocenaudio is an outstanding audio editor







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Sep 7 '16 at 22:15

























answered Sep 7 '16 at 7:58









andrew.46andrew.46

22.4k1470150




22.4k1470150













  • Thanks for you answer. Yes, I had installed it anyway. However.. I was wondering if there are levels of permissions that a program can have (like in Android).

    – Bhikkhu Subhuti
    Sep 7 '16 at 9:23











  • I gave information to OceanAudio on how to become a canonical partner. I think Skype is not open source, but they are a partner.

    – Bhikkhu Subhuti
    Sep 7 '16 at 22:35











  • @BhikkhuSubhuti It would be easier for everybody if there was an OcenAudio packager for either Debian or Ubuntu. Downloading from a formal Ubuntu Repository would make everyone happier :)

    – andrew.46
    Sep 7 '16 at 22:37











  • Ocean audio is available in Deb format on the website.

    – Bhikkhu Subhuti
    Sep 7 '16 at 22:52



















  • Thanks for you answer. Yes, I had installed it anyway. However.. I was wondering if there are levels of permissions that a program can have (like in Android).

    – Bhikkhu Subhuti
    Sep 7 '16 at 9:23











  • I gave information to OceanAudio on how to become a canonical partner. I think Skype is not open source, but they are a partner.

    – Bhikkhu Subhuti
    Sep 7 '16 at 22:35











  • @BhikkhuSubhuti It would be easier for everybody if there was an OcenAudio packager for either Debian or Ubuntu. Downloading from a formal Ubuntu Repository would make everyone happier :)

    – andrew.46
    Sep 7 '16 at 22:37











  • Ocean audio is available in Deb format on the website.

    – Bhikkhu Subhuti
    Sep 7 '16 at 22:52

















Thanks for you answer. Yes, I had installed it anyway. However.. I was wondering if there are levels of permissions that a program can have (like in Android).

– Bhikkhu Subhuti
Sep 7 '16 at 9:23





Thanks for you answer. Yes, I had installed it anyway. However.. I was wondering if there are levels of permissions that a program can have (like in Android).

– Bhikkhu Subhuti
Sep 7 '16 at 9:23













I gave information to OceanAudio on how to become a canonical partner. I think Skype is not open source, but they are a partner.

– Bhikkhu Subhuti
Sep 7 '16 at 22:35





I gave information to OceanAudio on how to become a canonical partner. I think Skype is not open source, but they are a partner.

– Bhikkhu Subhuti
Sep 7 '16 at 22:35













@BhikkhuSubhuti It would be easier for everybody if there was an OcenAudio packager for either Debian or Ubuntu. Downloading from a formal Ubuntu Repository would make everyone happier :)

– andrew.46
Sep 7 '16 at 22:37





@BhikkhuSubhuti It would be easier for everybody if there was an OcenAudio packager for either Debian or Ubuntu. Downloading from a formal Ubuntu Repository would make everyone happier :)

– andrew.46
Sep 7 '16 at 22:37













Ocean audio is available in Deb format on the website.

– Bhikkhu Subhuti
Sep 7 '16 at 22:52





Ocean audio is available in Deb format on the website.

– Bhikkhu Subhuti
Sep 7 '16 at 22:52


















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