this post was submitted on 04 Jun 2024
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Meanwhile, they have a Spotify Ubuntu repo... and will offer the installation of all these apps as .deb's which are able to do whatever they want
The difference is that those apps are taken charge of by the mint team
These are Ubuntu Packages. The external Spotify repo are binaries shipped by Spotify. I dont think there is any testing before users get that package, it is an external repo.
Oh, alright i was wrong, but it's still direct from Spotify isn't it? So no problem
It is proprierary Software, running as a pretty unrestricted app on your system.
The app could steal your Keys, read your photos, scan for pirated music or whatever.
Yeah, no problem XD
for sure you could do the Microsoft Way and trust random big tech, because otherwise you would just sue them... but no.
The spotify Flatpak has no Filesystem permissions afaik, and it thus pretty okay secure, even if you dont trust the upstream.
Ok yes it is proprietary, but at least it's from the main source and is confirmed to work well, which reduces risk, at the cost of sandboxing.
it's a tradeoff, and I think mint did the right thing.
The Flatpak meanwhile is transparently packaged, using the binary from the official Snap.
Canonical to my knowledge took forever for convincing Spotify to support Linux. Supporting Flatpak should be easy, but whatever.
This isn't about just Spotify, it's about other apps too
Yes but this was just an example of the hypocrisy of this action.
--subset=floss
for that--subset=verified
for this very nice ability (but this does not mean that unverified apps are worse than distro packages!)Flatpak is really good. You can look at the permissions, any app with the "safe" rating is probably safe, even if it is malware.
Btw the safety rating would be a good filter, once they solve the false negatives of stuff like ProtonPro/pupGui.