It’s my own system and I’m root of it, if I want to run a program that inspects every bit of thing, including keylog myself I should be perfectly able to do it.
This kind of limitations are fake security, because Wayland is as secure as the rest of the stack it lies on top, it can’t add any more security than what Linux itself can guarantee. So yes, I can still read dev input and keylog myself anyway, it’s just more frustrating.
I have been using OSX since it was born because it was an amazing UNIX system and a convenient user environment. I moved back to Linux as my daily driven when they started introducing a tons of blockers to whatever I wanted to do “for security reasons”.
“Oh you want to debug your own software?”
“Nah, I can’t allow you to trace state of another process, I don’t care you are root”
and so on…
Not sure that’s a good thing.
It’s my own system and I’m root of it, if I want to run a program that inspects every bit of thing, including keylog myself I should be perfectly able to do it.
This kind of limitations are fake security, because Wayland is as secure as the rest of the stack it lies on top, it can’t add any more security than what Linux itself can guarantee. So yes, I can still read dev input and keylog myself anyway, it’s just more frustrating.
I have been using OSX since it was born because it was an amazing UNIX system and a convenient user environment. I moved back to Linux as my daily driven when they started introducing a tons of blockers to whatever I wanted to do “for security reasons”. “Oh you want to debug your own software?” “Nah, I can’t allow you to trace state of another process, I don’t care you are root” and so on…