this post was submitted on 29 Oct 2023
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Privacy
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Even if a flatpak app has full access to host, they can't read the private data of other flatpak apps (~/.var).
As far as I know, the only possible way to escape the sandbox is to use
flatpak-spawn --host
and add--talk-name=org.freedesktop.Flatpak
but I only ever seen that on apps like vscode.Imo, the point of flatpak's sandbox is to give an extra layer of protection in case of security vulnerabilities. Permissions exist so apps can still work as they're supposed to. It's not a virtual machine isolated from the rest of the system where you can or should install malware.
Besides, the manifest is public and needs to be approved to be on the default repository.