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by DCKing
406 days ago
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> I mean, if my threat model starts with "I have a mal/spyware running alongside my browser with access to all my local files", I would pretty much call it game over. This is a big problem I have with desktop security - people just give up when faced with something so trivial as user privileged malware. I consider it a huge flaw in desktop security that user privilege malware can get away with so many things. macOS is really the only desktop OS that doesn't just give up when faced with same user privileged malware (in good and bad ways). So there it's likely a good mitigation - macOS also doesn't permit same user privileged processes to silently key log, screen record, network trace and various other things that are possible on Windows and common Linux configurations. |
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Another approach is to police everything behind rules (the way selinux or others do), which is even better in theory. In practice, you waste a ton of time bending those policies to your specific needs. A typical user won't take that.
Then there is the flatpak+portal isolation model, which is probably the most pragmatic, but not without its own compromises and limitations.
The attitude of trusting by default, and chrooting/jailing in case of doubt probably still have decades to live.