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Replying to and
It's fine-grained isolation of different components. Improving that involves having minimal attack surface exposed between the components, simple data formats and a focus on hardening the code most exposed at the boundaries with safe tools, etc.
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Isolating per-contact in a messaging client, per-site in a browser, etc. is applying the same principle of QubesOS at a fine-grained level using existing privacy/security boundaries. Since they're existing boundaries, it doesn't require the user to do anything or be aware of it.
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Replying to and
There are implementations of fine-grained isolation within applications using different mechanisms than OS sandboxing. Architecture-level virtualization is one possible approach and has pros / cons, as do other approaches like a higher-level virtual machine, etc.
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The isolation between sites in a browser or contacts in a messaging app are good examples of existing fine-grained trust boundaries to reinforce. There are a lot of other examples and reinforcing those can improve security for a billion users with no more work on their part.
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Replying to and
IDK if that's literally true. The move to https was itself a form of site isolation & industry was tinkering with hiding URLs altogether when they did about-face out of necessity. We might not have Chrome internal isolation today if not for trend reinforcing site identity in UI.
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Replying to and
You sound like me 12 years ago. 🙂 Seriously, https (and EV) are valuable for some threat models. And they can be subverted. My mention of them was not intended to promote them as "only identity that ever worked", etc. Its just an example of isolation in the UI.
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Replying to and
HTTPS is obviously valuable. EV doesn't accomplish the intended purpose because company names aren't unique and positive security indicators are near universally ignored by users. If a user doesn't change their behavior based on it being missing, it accomplishes nothing.
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Chrome on Android never showed EV in the first place. Positive security indicators are misleading (the connection from browser to an end point is secured, not the site) and the expectation that people notice absence of a security indicator is a backwards way to do it.
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