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by teacup50
3913 days ago
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Nothing really changed in terms of MacPorts liveliness; development continued as it always had, and Homebrew has gradually learned why MacPorts adopted the solutions it did -- usually the hard way. Homebrew's popularity was built on incredibly negative (and often dishonest) marketing that painted MacPorts as old and busted. For example, Homebrew touted the security advantages of not using sudo, as compared to MacPorts, ignoring the fact that: 1) MacPorts dropped privileges when performing port builds to an unprivileged user, providing generally higher security than running with the current user's full permissions. 2) MacPorts has always also supported non-root installations that didn't require sudo. |
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