The logo.
hottari
Not a single mention of secure boot? Weird.
I would say you are already secure enough if you are using software from official/trusted repositories and updating them on a regular basis.
That said, if you want extra security. Drop all software that cannot run on Wayland and go even further by isolating all desktop applications with the Flatpak sandbox. This is made extremely easy with Flatseal. Maximum points if you setup secure boot.
I'd wear that. Looks cool.
Did you know Firefox has also adopted manifest V3.
There are no ways to beat this. They want your real number. That's the point.
Use whatever software your peers are using, the way they are using them. The importance of software compatibility cannot be overstated.
I've broken installations many many times. But here's a recent one that comes to mind.
I was playing around with audit and some file was not responding as I wanted it to. Somehow my pea brain got the great idea to remove all config, uninstall audit then have the new install refresh the configs. Did this straight through the warnings and effectively broke sudo, a dependency of audit. Good thing arch-chroot exists.
I've done rm -rf /
twice on Fedora installs.
Security and privacy be damned.
I recently moved from Arch to NixOS. It's more fun than I thought it would be.