Domain: onguardonline.gov
Stories and comments across the archive that link to onguardonline.gov.
Comments · 9
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Re:How does this bot spread?
They exist, but people don't care. The US government has some pretty good information on OnGuard Online, written in a simple way that most users should be able to understand, but it's not like they advertise.
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Re:license
Give this place a shot man: http://www.onguardonline.gov/
We use http://iase.disa.mil/eta/index.html#onlinetraining and have to maintain the certs yearly.
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Direct Link
http://onguardonline.gov/quiz/socialnetworking_qu
i z.html Direct link to the game. -
Re:A step in the right direction
From below http://onguardonline.gov/quiz/index.html
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For the lazy
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Lazy Link To The Quiz...
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The game
You'd think there'd be a link in the submission, but that's because you're new to slashdot.
Buddy Builder can be found here: http://onguardonline.gov/quiz/index.html
But whatever magic is needed to play, I don't have because it just pops up a blank window. Damn, now I'll never learn how to keep myself safe while having fun doing it!
Anyway, all I know from TFA is that this question: "Accept or Deny: Wazzup? I think I know U send me your pic (in swimsuit, pls!)?" was blatantly and may I add illegally ripped from my IM session. The worst part was that "partygrrl666", aka "Bert the middle aged FTC agent", did send me a pic of himself in a swimsuit. Okay, you got me twice now Bert! -
Re:Tracability?
Well, this isn't the evidence I was hoping for (I was hoping for some actual statistics you'd used in forming your opinion - it turns out you just hadn't seen the drastic measures you were hoping to see.)
- The Mozilla group advertises the security advantages of its Firefox browser. Unfortunately, it lacks the funding for a TV campaign, but a donation effort was successfully made for a two page ad-spread in the NYT. If you're hoping for anti-Microsoft campaigns launched by the government, I'm afraid you'll have to wait on. Microsoft would yell "Antitrust!" before the first ad reached TV. There are no standards of what an application/operating system should accomplish. Unlike a drunk driver, Microsoft is not breaking any laws.
- Apple released such a campaign, but it only briefly mentioned OS X's security advantages over Windows. Again: home user desktop Linux distros lack the funding for a TV campaign, the government is not in the position to launch such a campaign.
- Fine victims of malware, you mean? Maybe we should also fine victims of burglary for having houses so insecure they were broken into and thus contributed to the takings (and therefore prolonged the lifestyle) of a burglar.
- The national wallet won't like it, won't stand for it, no sir. Unfortunately, that transition would cost a lot of money in contracts, support, downtime, retraining, installation, replacement of software tools, research, etc. It's a good goal, but it will take a long time to happen.
- There are already good OSS alternatives to most major office products. OpenOffice.org is the most frequently cited. It operates on Linux, Windows, and Mac OS X with X11 (included on the installation disc).
- That's your solution? "Accept it"? It won't work, accept that!
- Personally, I disdain the thoughtless media circus that circles around drunkards, especially minors. However, their crime could easily have threatened others lives, not just the wallets of those fall for some scam or another. Again, though, you're talking about punishing victims. These aren't people whose tires are bald, these are people whose tires were slashed while they were driving. Also, again, there are no standards as to what software products should be able to accomplish. If there were such standards, they would serve to choke and not to boost OSS initiatives. GNU/Linux and other OSes would be caught in litigation's red tape, fees and possibly fines before they could launch.
- They're called identity theft awareness campaigns. The FTC has launched such campaigns. The EU has launched such campaigns. In the USA, several banks have launched such campaigns in joint effort. I'm not aware of any current community involvement, but that doesn't prove it's not happening.
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stop, think, click?
I hadn't heard of the Fed's new cyber safety website before this article. It's an interesting attempt for the average user- should be educating to see how it develops over the next few months.
J