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72
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • cand find it. Do you have a link?

    1. Easier installation.
    2. Mint configuration of desktop settings
    3. Mint tools (Warpinator, Hypnotix)
  • But where to get the AppImages from? Who's maintaining? How to do Security Vulnerality Tracking for them?

  • I don't get your point. Why should somebody do this every day?

    As the experience from other users in this thread, it seems not extremely rare to have an overgrown ~/.cache/ folder. So checking it from time to time is a good advice. If we all do this for a time, and create bug tickets for software which is not cleaning up. Then this problem will hopefully go away with future software releases.

  • Because some users experienced accidential grows like OP had 160 Gbyte. So general advice for linux users can be stated as: Check your ~/.cache every now and then

    Critical systems/servers shall better be monitored as you suggest.

  • So OP's headline should be saying instead: Reminder to CHECK your ~/.cache folder every now and then

  • I always felt that there should be some user directory like /tmp/ which will be wiped regularly.

  • Is it safe to clear ~/.cache/mozilla/ while Firefox is running?

  • Interrupt Labs security researchers were the first to demo a Samsung Galaxy S23 zero-day in an improper input validation attack, while the ToChim team exploited a permissive list of allowed inputs to hack Samsun's flagship.

    and ...

    In all four cases, the device ran the latest version of the Android operating system with all security updates installed, according to the contest rules.

  • Can the Fedora Flatpaks be browsed and downloaded for other distros?

  • Even if you have trust. There can be security vulnerabilites in apps we are using. Flatpak seems to not really help in any way.

  • Think about service providers (government, banking, messaging, streaming, gaming). To participate in life we might depend on some of their services but don't fully trust these parties. Flatpak is not secure/sandboxed enough to run untrusted apps. Meanwhile on Android the situation looks much better.

  • Problems:

    • you need an additional solution for Wifi captives portals, at least there is a gap in your solution for this situation
    • intercontinental travelling might not be fun
  • That doesn't help outside of home. When we are in an untrusted network then the DNS mess makes us vulnerable for spoofing attacks.

  • Does it also follow the rule to not allow closed source API? (Notification,Location,..)

  • Even Live Streams are working out of the box!