Anything your user has permissions to do, basically. It is absolutely possible to cause serious issues with it in yolo mode, but for me the risk seems acceptably low.
Anything you can think of, but IIRC it asks you if it can perform a particular command (you can tell it to remember that it can or something like that).
A simple and very plausible example is deciding to run an innocent `find -delete` intended for a particular directory (to clean up temporary files, perhaps) but being confused about what the current directory is.
Literally anything a terminal command can do to your machine. Delete things, install malware, send your data to the FBI, start a fire by overheating (ok, now I'm just kidding... or not)
Anything your user has permissions to do, basically. It is absolutely possible to cause serious issues with it in yolo mode, but for me the risk seems acceptably low.
Anything you can think of, but IIRC it asks you if it can perform a particular command (you can tell it to remember that it can or something like that).
A simple and very plausible example is deciding to run an innocent `find -delete` intended for a particular directory (to clean up temporary files, perhaps) but being confused about what the current directory is.
Literally anything a terminal command can do to your machine. Delete things, install malware, send your data to the FBI, start a fire by overheating (ok, now I'm just kidding... or not)