this post was submitted on 17 Oct 2025
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not necessarily, you would still be running the virus under wine, which will probably not work as intended.
Wine is not an emulator. It's not sandboxed either. If you can do it as a user, a program running in wine can do it too.
There's nothing stopping a piece of malware from crawling your disk for sensitive information, or encrypting your files for ransom.
If you run it through something like bottles offer a bit of protection in that respect?
I wouldn't think so. Isn't bottles just an easier way to manage wine prefixes? If so, it doesn't do anything to hide your Linux system from the executable.
Wine prefixes are not sandboxes. They are a way to separate the windows-level configuration for different programs (eg env vars, or drivers, etc).
Wine is a translation layer between a compiled windows binary and your Linux syscalls/libraries/device drivers/etc, nothing more.
On the bottles website, it says that the bottles are sandboxes. It has a full subsystem container for each program that is isolated from the main system (according to them I guess).
To prove your point even more, WannaCrypt has a platinum rating on WineHQ.
Pirated ganes may contain linux viruses. No need for wine
do they tho
If they don't today I'm sure steam deck will help encourage.
agreed. increased linux market share will come with some disadvantages.
nothing we won't be able to surmount, we have already been building solutions.
Hard disagree - the point is a decade ago there wasn't enough Linux market share for bad actors to target Linux. Proton is a compatibility layer, which while technically being a sandbox, it isn't designed around security the way a browser sandbox is. It would not be hard for a virus embedded in a made-for-windows program to identify that it's actually a proton sandbox, then deploy a Linux-specific payload (assuming the malware designer gave it some forethought for that situation). Heck - there's plenty of viruses that do their work in scripting languages that don't care what OS you're running on.
we might see such malware one day, but i don't think this has ever been done in the wild just yet.