- cross-posted to:
- linux@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- linux@lemmy.ml
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/26453685
Not many people have heard about secureblue, and I want to spread the word about it. secureblue provides hardened images for Fedora Atomic and CoreOS. It’s an operating system “for those whose first priority is using linux, and second priority is security.”
secureblue provides exploit mitigations and fixes for multiple security holes. This includes the addition of GrapheneOS’s hardened_malloc, their own hardened Chromium-based browser called Trivalent, USBGuard to protect against USB peripheral attacks, and plenty more.
secureblue has definitely matured a lot since I first started using it. Since then, it has become something that could reasonably be used as a daily driver. secureblue recognizes the need for usability alongside security.
If you already have Fedora Atomic (e.g. Secureblue, Kinoite, Sericea, etc.) or CoreOS installed on your system, you can easily rebase to secureblue. The install instructions are really easy to follow, and I had no issues installing it on any of my devices.
I’d love more people to know about secureblue, because it is fantastic if you want a secure desktop OS!
my daily drive distro
Do you know if you can still do everything with it? Like atomic already has its own limitations and quirks. I can imagine there are bigger limitations with this.
Like can you install driver-level stuff like tablet drivers, GPU/CPU control, udev rules, etc… I guess I don’t really know the implications of the extra hardening.