I haven't really used Linux, but I feel it might be useful for a potential project. Is it possible, and how doable is it, to have a password locked admin account and an open user account which is heavily restricted on what they can do? As in, not even browse files. Preferrably only desktop access where they can launch the apps placed there. Which Linux would be the best for this while still being on the easier side to figure out? I do understand tech somewhat well and quite enjoy problem solving, so doesn't need to be ELI5 territory.
Thanks for the advice! The premission stuff sounds perfect. So by default, basic account can't really mess anything up, even if it's a tech literate person using it?
In theory if there are no security holes, a user account can only mess up its own account.
Note that what steps you want to take will really depend on who these users are and what you want to achieve. There's a vast chasm between allowing in, say, friends or colleagues, vs. letting random people on the internet access it. The latter will mean someone will intentionally look for exploits, which means e.g. regularly applying security updates becomes far more pressing.
If you are letting in random strangers, I'd look into only giving them access within a separate container or ideally virtual machine per user as an extra precaution unless what you're making available is very stripped down.
There are several Linux distributions specifically made for "kiosk" type applications. I don't have any specific ones to suggest, but if you search "Linux distro for kiosk" that should return plenty of results. Might be easier to use one of those to suit your needs than modifying a normal distro like Debian, Fedora, Ubuntu, etc
Yeah, came here to also say this is called Kiosk mode. You can also not have the filesystem writable and only have user files in (volatile/temporary) memory and everything set back to default once the user logs out. This is used in libraries and on computers in schools. Like a "Live-CD". And in my library the computer just logs out the user after 5 minutes of inactivity. Clears everything, sets everything back to default, opens the browser fresh with the homepage of the library.
The concept with the files in RAM ins usually called 'ramdisk'. It is a virtual filesystem on top of the write-protected one that doesn't ever change.
I think you can also prevent write access in general, but there are some caveats to that. Depends on the use-case.
Gnome has a feature in the settings for selecting which current applications can be made available to other users. I think it may be a flatpak only feature though.
Also another user will not be able to access another user's files if they are encrypted with LUKS or systemd-homed.
Along with the restrictions others have mentioned, you could look at running your system as a "live" install:
Actual OS boots directly off media like a USB stick or DVD
Operating system is mounted "read only" - even the super admin can't change files in the root partition
Even if a clever user finds a way to run programs, their changes don't persist after a reboot
If you need some persistence (eg, allowing users to save documents) you could mount a network share as the /home partition, but mount it "noexec" so if users manage to download programs from the internet, they aren't able to run them
Poor wording on my part. Simply don't want them to excecute anything I don't want them to or get into some directories. Access to something like My Files would be fine and in some cases may be needed, but nothing past that.