> > What I mean is, I ask "Why should I run selinux?" The answer > > then seems to be "We don't know, but if you don't bad things > > might happen to your system due to malicious programs." > Look at it this way. People wear seat-belts in cars not because they expect to get in an accident but as protection just in case they do. SELinux is analogous to a seat-belt. It may not save your system in the event of a breach, but not using it certainly won't guarantee that things will turn out any better either. Shockwave