<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<rss version="2.0" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom">
    <channel>
        <title>dropQbsd in three habits</title>
        <link>https://gnulinux.tube/videos/watch/4d6685ac-41c7-4be1-bee2-b2b35c3cca3a</link>
        <description>Three commands. Three habits. Ten minutes to learn. A lifetime of compartmentalization without thinking about it. No voiceover. No slides. No marketing. Just dropQbsd doing what it says on the tin. Habit 1 — Never save anything in /home/user. Your files live in userdoc, where the browser cannot reach them. Habit 2 — Browser and mail in their own domains. The browser browses. The mail handles mail. The firewall enforces the rest. Habit 3 — Three commands to move files between domains: qcp, qmv, qimport. Permissions enforced automatically. Quarantine with an explanation if something goes wrong. dropQbsd is a free and open source compartmentalization framework for OpenBSD. No hypervisor. No virtual machines. Just Unix users and permissions — the same mechanism that has protected servers for fifty years, applied to the desktop. github.com/nobraininside/dropQbsd</description>
        <lastBuildDate>Thu, 16 Jul 2026 12:20:27 GMT</lastBuildDate>
        <docs>https://validator.w3.org/feed/docs/rss2.html</docs>
        <generator>PeerTube - https://gnulinux.tube</generator>
        <image>
            <title>dropQbsd in three habits</title>
            <url>https://gnulinux.tube/lazy-static/avatars/56c3ce52-c53b-40c6-858d-7d1e76aecb6f.png</url>
            <link>https://gnulinux.tube/videos/watch/4d6685ac-41c7-4be1-bee2-b2b35c3cca3a</link>
        </image>
        <copyright>All rights reserved, unless otherwise specified in the terms specified at https://gnulinux.tube/about and potential licenses granted by each content's rightholder.</copyright>
        <atom:link href="https://gnulinux.tube/feeds/video-comments.xml?videoId=4d6685ac-41c7-4be1-bee2-b2b35c3cca3a" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/>
    </channel>
</rss>