It's not wrong. Browsers don't have a walled garden. They just try to be secure period. Apple's fictions is their walled garden saves you from bad apps. It doesn't. There have been and will be plenty of bad apps. A secure platform saves you from bad apps, period.
Again, you speak in this world of binary absolutes. Passionate, but clearly not an experienced security practitioner.
“A secure platform saves you from bad apps, period”
How did you come to this statement? Because my initial reaction is not a flattering one for you, but hey, I’m learning too and I find this topic super interesting.
Could you provide an example of a secure platform securing against threats in such an absolute way? Maybe QubesOS?
I’d like to hear your reasoning a bit more.
Also, I want to touch on your statement of browsers not having walled gardens, and being secure in a general sense.
Are you under the impression that modern browsers are equivalent to all other kinds of apps in regards to their threat profile?
Also, are you aware that most modern browsers phone home URLs to check against a malicious site list? I look at this as “walled-garden lite”
Personally, I keep flip flopping between MacOS, Windows 10 with WSL2 + Fedora, and a 8GB RPI 4B, which for the last few days has been doing ok for a desktop.
My point? The security vs freedom debate is complicated, and for many, rages back and fourth even in the same person. There are very few absolutes in this world. Save your hills to die on for points you KNOW you’re right about, because in this, you’re waaaaaaay off base.
Yes. First of because "walled garden" is just a metaphor for the type of system the App store represents and Second if you have "walls and fences" but with an open door where everyone can enter if they Pay 30% of their revenue then those walls are there for revenue generation and not for security.
The point of the comment isn't to claim security is binary, but rather that if we're making a distinction between "secure" or "not secure", the walled garden contributes nothing to the distinction.
This is flat out wrong. Security isn't binary.