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by palata
120 days ago
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I may be biased, but I have never seen anyone who would want to tamper with the software on their own system and would not be capable of installing an alternative OS, given that their device allows it (e.g. allowing unlocking the bootloader, etc). For "normies", it feels like the existing security model is actually not that bad. I can't imagine what would happen if everybody was running something without any sandboxing. |
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> I can't imagine what would happen if everybody was running something without any sandboxing.
I don't think anyone implied that? Having root or signature spoofing or even the ability to install kernel modules doesn't imply anything about the rest of the security model.