@mjtsai That Wil Shipley update misunderstands sandboxes completely. They are not designed to prevent malware. They are to mitigate exploits
-
-
- View other replies
-
@rosyna A bug from a legit developer is not malware or an exploit. I think you’re misunderstanding what his point was. - View other replies
-
@rosyna Why not? Isn’t that part of why the Mac App Store requires sandboxing, as a backstop against malware? -
@mjtsai No, it's so the developers can define the resources they need up front. This prevents bugs/bad coding from accessing other resources - View other replies
-
@rosyna I don’t remember that being presented as the main motivation. I don’t think anyone’s worried about apps accidentally printing. - View other replies
-
@mjtsai That was the only motivation when sandboxing was added to OS X for system services, which was before the Mac App Store existed. - View other replies
-
@rosyna I’m not sure how the original reason the technology was developed is relevant to the policy decision about using it now. -
@mjtsai Because it's never been used to protect against malicious apps. As I said, those apps can always ask the user which files to destroy - View other replies
- Show more
-
-
-
@mjtsai The first hidden folder in my root is DocumentRevisions-V100. Think I’m safe? Coz I think my CC auto updated itself. -
@leebennett Hope it’s not deleting your versions data. But maybe it doesn’t have privileges to do that. -
@mjtsai Well the first hidden folder I can access is PKInstallSandboxManagerpic.twitter.com/6NqS9fXbCG
-
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.
Michael Tsai
Rosyna Keller
Lee Bennett