policyKit does not involve sudo in any way, it uses systemd-logind from the session to elevate privileges. if you are marked as admin in the policyKit setup you will indeed be able to do admin things no matter what is written in sudoers ;)
policyKit does not involve sudo in any way, it uses systemd-logind from the session to elevate privileges. if you are marked as admin in the policyKit setup you will indeed be able to do admin things no matter what is written in sudoers ;)