I'm far from an expert on the field or in computer science, but from my limited perspective I don't see the need for sandboxing - after thousands of claude code interactions it never did nothing wrong that was serious, at all. If I understand this all correctly, lakeFS would be useful for versioning huge dataloads - but it's not my case: for my usecase I use dura and that's plenty, and for more serious projects where I want not only to version changes but also to 'journal' them, I use github. Also I don't understand one thing: this is like a different client? The website shows a screenshot of "Claude Code" that is not claude code at all, or is modified - that's not a terminal. Am I tripping in anything I said?
You're basically saying there's no need to wear a seatbelt because you've driven thousands of times without an accident. Claude is pretty well behaved, but it's not guaranteed to be safe, especially as you start to hit the gas and relinquish more control. Hope for the best, but plan for the worst and all that. Just because your use case doesn't need sandboxing, doesn't mean there's no need for sandboxing.
Agreed. As alignment improves, I'm becoming increasingly bearish on sandboxing.
Version control and isolation will probably stay useful, though, more for distributed development and workflow reasons than for safety.