Wait, wait, going via a wayland protocol means each piece of software requires you to opt into what it collects, on X11 they can just read everything all the time no matter what, spyware in X11 is trivially easy, it’s much harder when it goes via a wayland protocol.
Also, is what you’re describing on gnome or KDE? As I understand it, KDE separates those parts out, so one shouldn’t block the other.
Wait, wait, going via a wayland protocol means each piece of software requires you to opt into what it collects, on X11 they can just read everything all the time no matter what, spyware in X11 is trivially easy, it’s much harder when it goes via a wayland protocol.
Also, is what you’re describing on gnome or KDE? As I understand it, KDE separates those parts out, so one shouldn’t block the other.