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Replying to and
It's an issue even without WebUSB because plugging in a USB device doesn't mean you completely trust that computer. Users will also happily install an application. It's not much harder to download and install an application compared to selecting a USB device for a site to access.
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For devices not explicitly designed for WebUSB, it could show a scary, generic explanation of what access can provide. For devices designed for it, they could provide their own explanation with the semantics they've implemented. I think that'd be a good approach for it.
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The only real issue that I see is users have a much better collective knowledge about what installing an application provides vs. what granting access to a USB device provides. It's missing a nice 1 sentence + bullet point explanation of what granting access is going to provide.
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Replying to and
I meant the other way around here: websites could trivially abuse any FX2 they have WebUSB access for to reprogram it into HID. it's simple enough for script kiddies (do people still even use that term)
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I will say this is a general problem of trust. Most people already implicitly trust the version of adb or openocd without verifying the code, yet each of those programs could do similar things. I will agree that it easy harder to verify the code that gets run via the web.
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Replying to and
We've been getting very concerned about all the unofficial guides for installing GrapheneOS, particularly since a lot of them have been recommending that people use sketchy third party fastboot releases and Windows drivers (even though Windows Update provides the driver for you).
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For some reason, Windows often automatically has a working driver, but some people need to go into Windows Update and manually install an optional update providing the fastboot driver. It doesn't help that Windows ends up considering it some arbitrary smartphone brand driver.
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