The NSA Gives Their Two Cents On Securing XP/2K/NT
caino59 writes "Thier site is already slow, and must be taking a hit, but the NSA has released several guides on Securing Windows XP, Windows 2000, and Windows NT. Now go out and download the guides, and /. the NSA!"
Just switch it to the "off" position... website secure :)
-=sig=-
... to secure a win box is to put it in concrete and throw it deep in the ocean.
--
-- search the web
After all, the majority of slashdot readers use windows NT/2000/Xp.
Do you even lift?
These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.
but the page hasn't been updated since november 2002. I've had these guides, which are excellent BTW, for all of 2003.
It even says so at the bottom of the page.
I'll have some quality time on the airplane, so I will probably browse what they wrote. What is struck me as interesting was large and how long mozilla's download manager says it will take to get the zip files.
Win2K - 13,008KB, ~1.4 hours
WinNT - 1,282 ~ 10 minutes
WinXP - 1,713 ~12 minutes
+++ UGUCAUCGUAUUUCU
Wouldn't it be ahh... against the NSA's true interests to tell people how to secure private machines better?
The dangers of knowledge trigger emotional distress in human beings.
Doesn't freely available security support terrorism by its very nature?
-- Contradictions only exist in thought - not in reality.
-PGP has been out for years,
-its too late
-they're either already using encryption or will not be
-maybe might as well help normal people secure they're information
And every copy of Windows has one backdoor for CIA, NSA, FBI, Homeland and the three other agencies your not classified to know about.
It's not as simple as it seems. The NSA is essentially two organizations -- one whose job it is to break communications, another whose job it is to make sure communications don't get broken. This even means helping industry with codes - they had a major say in portions of DES, in which they designed portions such as the S-Boxes so that they were less vulnerable to still classified (at the time) types of cryptoanalysis. This isn't to say that one should blindly trust the NSA in matters of security, only to say that things are more complex than many would believe upon casual inspection.
Marxism is the opiate of dumbasses