Gnome implemented sandboxing for thumbnail parsers, but @ubuntu patches that out, because why not? https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/bubblewrap/+bug/1709164 …
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Would this "Permission denied" imply that perhaps there still is some sort of sandboxing going on? The platform here is Ubuntu 18.04 Desktop.pic.twitter.com/meg7u8nRrH
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Ahh, it looks like AppArmor was what protected Ubuntu in its default state. Disabling AppArmor results in successful code execution.pic.twitter.com/qCCYzOVKFZ
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hmm I didn't have to disable anything, I ran it from the live cd. does that differ significantly from the normal ubuntu desktop?
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I verified it works in default CentOS7, Just visiting a website then opening Downloads is enough. You can use my testcase if you like, http://lock.cmpxchg8b.com/ghostscript.html …pic.twitter.com/kyAe1EfqOx
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1) Why would anything appear in Downloads just by visiting a website? I am presented with a proper download prompt. 2) The page refreshes ~2 times a second, so I get a bunch of those. Annoying 3) MATE (gnome fork) appears safe, even when double-clicking on the file.
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Replying to @KirilsSolovjovs @hanno and
Chrome automatically downloads files to Downloads without prompting. You'll have to write your own testcase for whatever browser you're using.
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Sounds like something that should be fixed in Chrome.
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Replying to @KirilsSolovjovs @taviso and
Not the thumbnail parsing of course. The automatic downloading without prompting.
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Not a useful discussion, it's working as intended.
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