pseudo-rm is going to fail, either because the implementer didn't handle
some corner case correctly, or because you typed rm instead of nrm, or
because a file was removed by a program without anyone typing anything,
and the only solution is to have a backup. So if you're going to have a
backup anyway, what's the point?
Lets say we did a daily backup at 9:00am and deleted some files by error at 5:00 pm. Then what???
A daily backup plus some kind of control mechanism prior to rm (ls and/or nrm) seems to solve the above mentioned scenario. Anyway that's what I've learned from my experience.
poc
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