Basically
- Sandboxing is bad, bubblewrap (used in Flatpak) is a really good implementation though. Firefox and other apps are not very well sandboxed though
- The kernel is endangered through user namespaces (used in Flatpak and Podman/Docker containers i.e. in Distrobox and Toolbox too)
- the root password can be extracted veeery easily, especially when entering it through a terminal. Windows “okay” button might actually be more secure!
- X11 is insecure, okay we know that
- the kernel is very bloated and everything in there has all the permissions, which is not needed
- Kernel bugs are often not fixed quickly or at all
- Stable Distros are insecure if only CVE bugs are backported, as many security bugs dont get a CVE
I am currently experimenting with the hardened Kernel and hardened_malloc, I use GrapheneOS since over a year.
On Linux its a bit more difficult though, as Flatpak and Distrobox dont work anymore.
This would mean user namespaces need to be enabled again, which I can’t seem to make work with
sudo sysctl -w kernel.unprivileged_users_clone=1
But the file doesnt exist and creating it doesnt work, probably needs to be a karg or something?
I am testing all this using the hardened mod of Ublue (a slight Fedora deviation using its image-based distribution model):
https://github.com/qoijjj/hardened-images
The images are rather opinionated though and have things like Flatpak removed, making them nearly unusable.
Maybe nix is a solution? Would this be a good idea?
Another point, bubblejail is not yet in the Fedora repos, which would be a way to make secure sandboxing accessible. Here is a spec file from rusty-snake.
What do you know about this?
“This connection is untrusted” “SSL_ERROR_BAD_CERT_DOMAIN”
The irony.
If you click through the page is 404
Oh, that’s right, maybe the link is just wrong
I mean the origin is still legit, so there is no real problem with it, right?
One cannot just register a site as github.com
It uses the github cert, but that is not set to use the github.io subpages that start with www.
I’m not sure if at this point the browser verifies whether the cert is even legit for github.com