Apple Submits Mac OS X For Security Evaluation
ranger8x writes "Apple has submitted Mac OS X and Mac OS X Server to the U.S. government's National Information Assurance Partnership to evaluate various security features. It seems Apple is looking for some respect by the government, and to 'get more exposure.'"
Now with this move, Jobs is deftly putting a thumb in the eye of Gates. Microsoft talks about 2006 for security, Apple says, "Hey, why not today?". Having a respected third party audit will ring loud against Microsoft's tight lipped security policy. Apple already exposes the base source code for Mac OS X called Darwin to anyone that wants to take the time to download it.
I had something else important to point out but the FedEx guy just showed up with Warcraft III. I am sure you will understand...
Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
- longer than 8 character passwords
- checking for good passwords, password expiration, etc.
- let the user turn off the option where you can login with "John Doe" instead of your username
- let the user turn off the 'helpful' feature that puts the last user's name on the login screen
- put a checkbox in the installation process to install a system with maximum security options... stuff like no list of users on the login screen and no web server installed at all, etc.
Just a few ideas...There are 10 types of people in this world, those who can count in binary and those who can't.