Maybe Canonical will be the next Crowdstrike

  • Possibly linux@lemmy.zipOP
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    4 months ago

    Snap packages do a very poor job of sandboxing. Also snapd runs as root as in needs extra privileges to mount the loopback devices

    • thingsiplay@beehaw.org
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      4 months ago

      Off course the package manager runs as root. I meant the packages itself does not. I mean every package manager for your system, including Flatpak, Apt, Pacman requires root. Snap packages are better sandboxed (on Ubuntu) than Flatpak or any other system packages.

      Look, I don’t like Snaps and they were one of the reasons why I switched away from Ubuntu after 13 years. But your argumentation doesn’t work for me. If any of the applications updates a bad update, then it wouldn’t make the system unbootable. Crowdstrike software on the other hand are closed source and they had privileges to do everything on your system, as it was installed as Kernel level access program. None of this is true for Snap packages that are auto updated, nor is it true for Flatpak packages.

      I am not saying nothing can happen, but because Snap packages are updating itself automatically does not equal Canonical = Crowdstrike. Most packages are not even packaged up by Canonical.

      • Possibly linux@lemmy.zipOP
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        4 months ago

        Well flatpak and podman don’t need root. They run as the local user.

        However agree with you on your point about Crowdstrike. I just think that chances are we will see plenty more of bad updates that break things