I'm not trying to preserve the 'philosophy of *nix,' I'm trying to
preserve the functionality of the rm -fr command. I mention the
'philosophy' only to point out it's wisdom.

My point is that setting a precedent of implementing security features
that are already proven ineffective is destructive to the whole reason
Ubuntu exists as an alternative to Windows. Adapting the same failed
methods just blurs the distinction, compromises security, and deters
users.

There are already other blocks (proven more effective) in place for this
command (sudo (already requiring a password), the -f switch, etc) that
more inexperienced users shouldn't be using, or should be uncomfortable
enough with them not to use them all the time anyway, and anyone
experienced enough to use them should know when not use them, as well as
proofread their scripts every time and develop habits that don't invite
the opportunity for a type-o to delete a partition.

That being said, over the years the number of times I've accidentally
run 'rm -fr /' successfully is zero, and I haven't found anyone I know
that has either. I would imagine the relative number of experienced
users affected by accidental invocation of a 'sudo rm -fr /' command is
pretty low.

Even if I were to do it myself, it wouldn't be all that detrimental to
me as I do daily backup which, by the way, is also a good habit that
even inexperienced users develop pretty quick.

-- 
rm does not preserve root by default
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/174283
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