On Wed, 2018-06-06 at 09:45 -0500, mcatanz...@gnome.org wrote:
> On Wed, Jun 6, 2018 at 4:39 AM, Nikos Mavrogiannopoulos 
> <n...@redhat.com> wrote:
> > I am actually very curious about the results of such a move, and
> > know
> > whether it is going to have a significant impact today. Debian has
> > already tried experimenting with it:
> > 
> > https://lists.debian.org/debian-devel/2017/08/msg00166.html
> 
> But OpenSSL is not used by browsers.

That's right. In that case they would most likely have to handle issues
like, tool A and B don't work with that server, though it works in
firefox. The fedora proposal has a different challenge, if something
doesn't work it wouldn't work anywhere.

> > I think the debate here is whether fedora (and in general operating
> > systems) can afford to be stricter than the browsers. As an OS our
> > attack surface is much larger than the browser setup, and thus it 
> > makes
> > sense (to me), to be more careful.
> 
> You previously said in this thread that the system policy *will* be 
> used by browsers.

Right, the plan is to have a policy to be default for everyone,
including browsers which run in the OS.

> I would not be concerned if we had a separate policy that was
> suitable 
> for use by browsers, which could be used by Firefox, glib-
> networking, etc. But we don't, and it's not proposed here.

That's correct. I don't think it makes sense to have separate policies
per application.

regards,
Nikos
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