Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by digi_owl 3482 days ago
Its worse.

SELinux basically implements the concept of "trusted computing". This is a military term, and its about how the generals in pentagon can trust a computer in the field to not "leak" sensitive data (like how mismanaged the war is). This be it to the enemy or ones own soldiers.

Later big media would embrace the term as an alternative to DRM.

Effectively SELinux treats anything and anyone as a potential attacker, including the owner and user on the computer it is installed on.

And the reason it "makes sense" on Android is that the owner of the device is not the owner of the OS, that is the OEM, carrier and ultimately Google.