this post was submitted on 19 Nov 2023
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Kernel sandboxing. I mean, breaking out of browser "sandboxes" is a game these days.
Which is why using the web without JavaScript is a security measurement which I strongly recommend to enable. Sure, many sites will be "less interactive" then, but I'm afraid that it is the only solution. For the usually: rather small number of websites which you absolutely need to use with JavaScript enabled (do you, really?), a separate browser inside a container (or VM) would be a good option. I admit that this is not the most comfortable setup, but I really prefer to be safe than sorry. YMMV, but you asked.
That's a class of different mechanisms. I updated my comment above. I'll repeat the text there:
Virtually every website out there today uses Javascript. Lemmy uses Javascript. What makes this particular website a risk?
Yeah, I do. Fifteen years ago, I used NoScript, and some things broke, but it was usable; there were enough people running non-JS-capable browsers that websites had a reasonable chance of functioning. The Web generally does not function without Javascript today.
Most of those work without it.
Lemmy is one of several ActivityPub-capable applications. You do not need to use Lemmy inside a web browser in order to participate here. In fact, you don't even need to use a web browser.
I disagree. Some websites (with lazy developers) work less well without JavaScript. You'll gain less annoyances (no JS = no pop-ups and no sophisticated anti-adblock techniques), more speed, less energy consumption, less potential security risks. You'll lose... not really much. "Web applications" (usually worse, slower and less reliable than installed software), a couple of websites which are very focused on providing effects over contents - sounds like a fair deal to me, but again, YMMV.
Yes, there will never be absolute security. If it runs on a computer, it most likely has security flaws.