this post was submitted on 13 May 2024
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My guess is that it's not "the standard" for managing file ownership stuff, since it doesn't manage ownership. As a result, they're shown less often in tutorials and tool output.
The ownership semantics still needs to exist and get managed, and so a lot of less sophisticated software will just check ownership, not it's actual ability to access.
Tools and capabilities come quick, but the ecosystem as a whole moves glacially slow. Often that's good, because it means user land APIs and programs don't often just fail for no good reason, which creates the stability that makes it popular and useful. It also makes it painful to get "new stuff" into widespread use, where "new" means less than 30 years old.
You see the same thing with selinux. It's fine now! But it's still scary. And we'll finally have btrfs as the standard in 2040 I'll wager.