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by interpol_p
4695 days ago
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But that is completely missing the point relating to intent. Browsing the Chrome's password page requires far less malicious intent than finding/writing a script to dump someone's keychain passwords. That's the main issue for me with Chrome. I know people that I wouldn't trust not to navigate to chrome://settings/passwords, yet I would trust them not to actively attempt to defeat my computer's security (no matter how feeble). Chrome makes it easier to breach trust. A bad design. |
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Well, yeah, I'm certainly not seeing any point there.
> Browsing the Chrome's password page requires far less malicious intent than finding/writing a script to dump someone's keychain passwords.
No, it doesn't. It might require somewhat more effort, but it doesn't require any different amount of intent.
> I know people that I wouldn't trust not to navigate to chrome://settings/passwords, yet I would trust them not to actively attempt to defeat my computer's security
Intentionally navigating to chrome://settings/passwords is no less an active attempt to defeat security than doing a command line dump of the keychain passwords is.
> Chrome makes it easier to breach trust.
Its trivially easy to breach trust in about a million different ways if you are given unsupervised accessed to an unlocked OS user account with sensitive information attached to it. Chrome does not make any significant difference to that.