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I realized there's actually a Windows security feature I would love to see expanded in Linux. Especially for proprietary packages.
Rep building. The "cheap" executable signing certificates require first a few thousands accepts before stopping to generate warnings.
We already have this somewhat with testing repos, but I would love to see this expanded into flatpak and maybe even something tailored for it.
Something like a torrent based package manager where you normally install things via GUI, but if it doesn't have enough peers yet only through the CLI with a special flag that when provided is only able to install packages with few peers.
So install without flag: only peer rich packages.
Install with flag: only peer poor packages.
It doesn't have to be peers. It could be any form of traceable recommendation, such as signed hashes.
You could even build a more complicated system rep building, with certain peers carrying more weight than others if they for example run comparable packages.
Someone with commentary on this brainfart?
repbuilding: containerized proprietary packages
Non-repbuilding: containerized reproducible builds, with the source code and license(FOSSness can as such be automatically checked by building it and hash-checking)
Non-repbuilding with root: distro packages
For reference the Windows scheme is:
repbuilding: 215.99$/yr and strict signature management rules.
non-repbuilding: 279.99$/yr and very very strict signature management rules.
Root: 500$/yr, Microsoft gets to read your code and has to sign off each update.