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They arebgwnweally against root, as it "breaks security" in their mind.
Nevermind that all systems, everywhere, have root for some account/some account is root.
It breaks their sandboxing model, which limits the impact of malicious/compromised apps.
To be clear, I'm not arguing against root here. I daily a rooted phone, and I believe if it's impossible to get root on something, it isn't really yours. You can get root on GrapheneOS; they just discourage it because they're strongly focused on security.
They're right. If a bug in AdAway, which needs root to write /etc/hosts caused it to fetch and execute malicious code, the malware could do anything I can do to my device. The scenario is plausible; it routinely fetches blocklists, and I imagine a sophisticated enough attacker could compromise the delivery mechanism.
I don't worry about that scenario because it's unlikely that kind of attacker will target me. GrapheneOS is meant for people who do have to worry about that kind of thing.
@Onomatopoeia @Zak@lemmy.world