Since owner has read/write and everyone else has read-only a chmod wouldn't help or be necessary here, a setenforce (C) would allow you to swap between enforcing/permissive modes to see if SELinux policies are preventing read.
The output seems to indicate that the OS is protected with SELinux and probably sudo setenforce 0 can be used to put it in permissive mode
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Stache
3 weeks agotame_rabbit
4 months, 1 week ago