• Are you using Flatpaks?
  • Are you trusting Flathub?
  • Do you bother about the sandboxing and security?
  • TheEntity@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I expect the Flatpak sandbox to protect my ~/ from getting cluttered by applications, not to protect me from any actually malicious software. The post’s premise seems misguided.

    • Kata1yst@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      YES. I don’t understand this delusion people keep perpetuating. Flatpak has a MILD form of container sandboxing. For a real security sandbox we have Firejails or Bubble wrap.

      Flatpak is, at it’s core, a software development and distribution packaging format. NOT a security implementation.

        • hornedfiend@sopuli.xyz
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          1 year ago

          I always check my flatpak settings post install before running the app and adjust permissions according to need. I mean it does offer more security to me since it’s user installed, I can granularly update permissions and control more or less where and what is can touch.

          Alternatives to this are SELinux,AppArmour and firejails which are slightly more inconvenient to use.

          To me that is mostly secure,or secure enough.

          Well and then there’s some immutable distros which might help overall.

          Edit: paragraphs

    • jollyrogue@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Yeah, Flatpak was never meant to be a security mechanism. It is a convenient way to add security to userland though.

    • Avid Amoeba@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      In addition to own new code, bundled copies of libraries in packages introduces net new attack surface which isn’t patched via the regular distribution security patch process. The image decoding lib that allows remote code execution now exists in flatpaks independently from the one in /lib. Every flatpak vendor that contains it has to build and ship their own patched version of it. This is even more valid for any other libraries flatpaks include that don’t exist on the system. The most widely used Linux OSes come with security patching processes, expectations and sometimes guarantees. This new attack surface breaks those and the solution is security sandboxing. This approach has been proven in mobile app packaging and distribution systems. Android is a great example where apps are not trusted by default and vulnerable ones rarely cause collateral damage on otherwise up-to-date Android systems. This is an objective problem with the out-of-band distribution model allowed by flatpak and snap or any similar system, whether you care about it or not personally. It’s a well understood tradeoff in software development. It has to be addressed as adoption grows or we risk reducing Linux security to the levels of Windows where apps regularly bundle dependencies with no sandboxing whatsoever.

      • suprjami@lemmy.sdf.org
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        1 year ago

        Every Flatpak vendor

        So who’s that? Flathub and Fedora, the latter of who automate the Flatpak builds from distro packages anyway.

        If you’re using a smaller distro which is not backed by a huge security team then this is probably an advantage of using Flatpak, not a negative.

          • suprjami@lemmy.sdf.org
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            1 year ago

            Yes. All Flatpak apps can be used on any distro.

            I’m using the Fedora Flatpak Firefox on Debian, because Fedora’s Flatpak runtime supports Kerberos authentication, the Flathub runtime doesn’t.

          • AProfessional@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            All Flatpaks are portable. There is no reason to use their repo usually though as Flathub often has more up to date, featureful, or upstream maintained versions instead.