GNOME keeps activating airplane mode on startup
I have a desktop computer with wi-fi support that I don't use and bluetooth support that I rarely use. After upgrading from GNOME 42 to 43.rc, I notice GNOME Shell is now activating airplane mode without my permission when I start the session. This is unwanted because I'm not on an airplane. So the first thing I do after starting GNOME 43.rc is to disable the airplane mode. Disabling airplane mode automatically enables bluetooth, which is also unwanted unless I want to transfer something over bluetooth, so next thing I do is disable bluetooth. This works until I reboot: next time I start GNOME, it activates airplane mode without my permission once again.
I've never seen this happen with any previous version of GNOME. Can we revert back to the old behavior?
I wonder if GNOME sees that I have bluetooth disabled and am not connected to wi-fi, and therefore thinks "let's enable airplane mode." Please don't!
(Honestly, the entire concept of airplane mode is messed up since wi-fi is allowed on airplanes nowadays. I think airplane mode on other devices only disables mobile broadband? But that's a tangent well outside the scope of this bug.)