this post was submitted on 04 Mar 2025
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That it is "not yet fit to protect from malicious apps" is an important point which I think many people are not aware of.
This makes sandboxing something of a mixed bag; it is nice that it protects against some types of incompetent packages, and adds another barrier which attackers exploiting vulnerabilities might need to bypass, but on the other hand it creates a dangerous false sense of security today because, despite the fact that it is still relatively easy to circumvent, it it makes people feel safer (and thus more likely to) than they would be otherwise when installing possibly-malicious apps packaged by random people.
I think (and hope) it is much harder to get a malicious program included in most major distros' main package repos than it is to break out of bubblewrap given the permissions of an average package of flathub.