this post was submitted on 22 Jun 2024
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Imagine your friend that does not know anything about linux, don't you think this would make them not install the firefox flatpak and potentially think that linux is unsafe?

I ask this because I believe we must be careful and make small changes to welcome new users in the future, we have to make them as much comfortable as possible when experimenting with a new O.S

I believe this warning could have a less alarming design, saying something like "This app can use elevated permissions. What does this mean?" with the "What does this mean?" text as a clickable URL that shows the user that this may cause security risks. I mean, is kind of a contradiction to have "verified" on the app and a red warning saying "Potentially unsafe", the user will think "well, should I trust this or not??"

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[–] areyouevenreal@lemm.ee 0 points 5 months ago

Text and images and hyperlinks; maybe audio and video if you're lucky and you can prove you can be trusted.

Those things still require a GPU to render efficiently.

All the other stuff you talk about don't need a GPU or really any systems permissions at all. So even if the web changes to your twisted view the flatpak would still require the same permissions. All you've just proven is that you don't understand technology.

If any such thing as GPU access is provided it should be to deposit data, not to run code.

You don't know what a GPU is apparently. Regardless the same access is needed for both.

Also you use Lemmy, which requires scripting. Pretty much every online game, shopping website, calculator, and so on require scripting of some kind. Scripting isn't just for bad things like tracking. It makes a lot of cool stuff possible, that you doubtlessly use everyday. As a plus it's generally more secure to use a web app than have a myriad of different programs or applets replace all these different things, as websites are sandboxed. There is a reason JavaScript replaced Flash and Java applets.

You're confusing a technology problem with a society/capitalism problem.