Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 3rd Jun 2009 11:21 UTC, submitted by Hakime
Google One of the defining features of Google's Chrome web browse is its sandboxing feature. You probably won't realise it's there, but from a security point of view, sand-boxing is one of the most impotant factors in browser security, as it severely limits the amount of damage a security hole can do: sure, you've got a hole in the browser, but thanks to sandboxing, you're pretty much locked in - until you break out of the sandbox, of course. Sandboxing on the Windows variant of Chrome was a "complicated affair", says Chromium developer Jeremy Moskovich, but for the Mac version, it's all a bit easier and more straightforward. On Linux, however, it's a mess.
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RE[5]: On the origin of species
by MattPie on Wed 3rd Jun 2009 16:34 UTC in reply to "RE[4]: On the origin of species"
MattPie
Member since:
2006-04-18

I had a Sidux Linux installation, with a separate /home partition. I installed Fedora 10 over Sidux, and tried to re-use my home partition. SELinux wouldn't let me log in.

CentOS5/RHEL5 throw various SElinux errors if home directories are on NFS. Not very enterprise-y of them...

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