On Sun, Jul 10, 2016 at 05:11:06PM +0200, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
> there's an interesting counter-argument against something similar to
> snapcraft/snappy.
> 
> https://lists.archlinux.org/pipermail/arch-general/2016-July/041579.html

The fact is that third parties ship unconfined binaries directly to
users today. Look at the number of projects which instruct users to add
a third party deb repository to sources.list, or to "curl ... | sudo
sh" or similar.

>From this perspective, Snappy improves the situation massively. If a
user's choice is between running some third party's binary installer as
root, and installing a Snap, then it's clear which is the better option.

It's all very well to say that all of these Snaps should instead be
distribution packages in backports (or equivalent) pockets, but see:
reality. There's a reason fpm exists.

And even if distribution archive were perfectly up to date,
distribution packages don't currently provide the same level of
individual package isolation that Snaps do.

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