It helps protect you because if the application in question is compromised (or has a flaw, i.e. an accidental rm -rf /*
), the only access it has is limited to the user it is run as. If it is run as root, it has full administrative privilege.
It helps protect you because if the application in question is compromised (or has a flaw, i.e. an accidental rm -rf /*
), the only access it has is limited to the user it is run as. If it is run as root, it has full administrative privilege.
I personally like ligatures when I’m programming. It took me some getting used to, but now I can’t live without them due to how distinct it makes the code segments. I fully understand disliking them though. Thankfully fonts like source code pro allow disabling features like ligatures and their godawful handwriting styled italics, so you’re able to use just the parts you like.
It may be mostly “security theater” but it requires almost no extra effort and drastically increases the difficulty of compromise by adding privilege escalation as another requirement to gaining root access.