I, too, came across this problem and found that the only way out was to kill SELinux and stop it from starting up at boot. HOWEVER, I have to point out that the latest drivers for Samsung (from their web site) work without being bothered about SELinux. In fact, I found that the latest Samsung drivers are far, far superior to the first ones which they brought out : when I first tried my CLP-500, I had to use the Xerox driver as the one supplied by Samsung simply wouldn't work at all. Later, when I bought an ML-2010, I went to the web site, found their universal package, loaded that and it works just fine for all the Samsung printers. Incidentally, I'm running Fedora 8 but I also tried them under SuSE10.2 and Ubuntu and they were OK. CroombeFP -- This e-mail produced entirely under Linux. Absolutely NO M$ products have been used.