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by simias 3086 days ago
If one hostile application running on my machine isn't sandboxed then SSH local keys are pwned anyway. Might as well install a keylogger or just hijack ssh-agent directly. Full disk encryption keys might not be but the app will have access to any mounted and unlocked safe. Ditto for cryptocurrency wallets without a hardware token (and even with a hardware token if the app can get it to sign a bogus transaction).

I don't think this particular vulnerability significantly increases the surface of attack for any non-sandboxed application running on my computer. There are much easier and straightforward ways to get access to anything an attacker with shell access may want that don't involve dumping the kernel VM. So in my situation the only vector of attack I'm worried about is JS running in the browser since I gave up on javascript whitelisting long ago when I realized that most of the web is unusable when you don't allow heaps of untrusted scripts to run all over the place. I don't have time to audit the source code of every random website I visit.