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Gates on Winsecurity

xandroid writes "Just a couple days after talking about free hardware, Bill Gates has sent an email to customers saying that Microsoft will continue to focus on security, titled 'A Microsoft Progress Report: Security' (MSNBC story, PC Magazine story, Google News' related stories). The email mentions that fast-spreading and destructive viruses and worms are 'threatening the potential of technology to advance business productivity, commerce and communication', but says that to counter the threats, Microsoft will make 'major investments in customer education and partnerships that will help make the computing environment safer and more secure'. He also talks about the XP Service Pack 2, and says that Microsoft is 'working with microprocessor companies, including Intel and AMD, to help Windows...support hardware-enforced data execute protection (also known as NX, or no execute)'." Reader Zephyr_in writes "Macworld reports that the beta-release of Longhorn is likely to be postponed to early 2005 because Microsoft is concentrating first on a security-focused update (SP2) to Windows XP. Earlier this week Gates said Longhorn is 'not a date-driven release.' and said the speculation that the operating system will come out in 2006 is 'probably valid.'"

59 of 543 comments (clear)

  1. Well.... by BWJones · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The email mentions that fast-spreading and destructive viruses and worms are 'threatening the potential of technology to advance business productivity, commerce and communication',

    I don't know about that.......seeing as how I use OS X, I have yet to experience downtime or hassles due to viruses or worms. Of course there are problems with an increased number of emails from Windows machines containing worms and such, but they are simply filtered out via the spam filter. So this statement from Gates only really applies unless you are using something other than OS X, Linux, IRIX, Solaris, BSD, etc.... :-)

    Earlier this week Gates said Longhorn is 'not a date-driven release.' and said the speculation that the operating system will come out in 2006 is 'probably valid.'"

    Windows is Microsoft's cash cow and from an investor perspective, there may be push from the shareholders.I have sold off most of my Microsoft stock on principle after watching their abuse of the PC market for the last few years, but I still own some and this is not encouraging.

    --
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    1. Re:Well.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
      So this statement from Gates only really applies unless you are using something other than OS X, Linux, IRIX, Solaris, BSD, etc.... :-)

      Which is 90% of us, so get over yourself. OS snobbery is obnoxious.


    2. Re:Well.... by kevin_conaway · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A lot of people dont have a choice whether it be for work or personal reasons. "Voting with your wallet" is often an impractical short-term solution for people that need a piece of software to work now, not when the company decides to port it to linux.

      Its been said over and over: OS's are tools, they all have their strengths and weaknesses, use the right one for the job.

    3. Re:Well.... by Darby · · Score: 3, Insightful

      When it comes to viruses, whoever is using the OS that is in the majority will be part of the problem. The reason that virus writers write for Windows is that most people are using windows.

      So explain all the internet worms that have brought the internet to a crawl and infected from machine to machine with no user intervention.
      Windows has a 20% share in this market. Apache is 70%.
      *All* of the worms are for Windows and Windows only.

      That was the sound of your argument crashing down around you.

      Security through minority is an even worse idea than security through obscurity.

      Nice try, but minority or majority, when it comes to security Windows is the absolute loser.

    4. Re:Well.... by pantherace · · Score: 5, Insightful
      This argument is just not valid. Windows simply is insecure, and it's users are part of the problem, but they aren't really the root.

      How long has linux existed, and how many worms have there been? Or applications: 2 apache worms or so? and apache is by sheer numbers, what? 60% or more of the webservers on the internet. (lets assume there are actually a dozen apache worms since 1992, if there are even that many, that's one a year.) How many IIS worms are there?

      How many worms have been able to break into the kernel itself? Oh, given the couple of kernel bugs, it was possible, but they were all local exploits. Which requires the code to be run on the system as opposed to things like the Classic MacOS had some virii for it, but compare the length of time it had been out (and how it was the GUI computer for quite a while) 16 years or so (1984-2000) Over that time, there were probably less virii for it than windows 98 got in the first year. (Probably partly because as an OS it was one of the dumbest in terms of networking, you couldn't do anything with it.)

      MacOS X has been out for around for 4, and the number of worms is comparable to those for Linux, as in almost nothing.

      I expect when Longhorn comes out, there will again be another torrent of worms. But maybe Microsoft may be getting it together with regards to security. They did a pretty good job of stability with 2000, but backslid on XP.

      Even if Linux/KDE became as dominant as dominant as Windows is now, the problem wouldn't be nearly as bad. You see, Linux distributions (almost all? and the people who aren't should know what they are doing) use package management. This means that instead of running an installer for program a, b, c off of cds or the internet, they use packages provided by people who they can check cryptographic signatures of automatically, for example with rpm. Now, that's not perfect, and you don't have to have that, but it gets people into a method of expecting part of it to come from a trusted source (eg gentoo which provides md5sums of all the packages downloaded. or rpm which allows both server and developer signatures last I looked.) The distribution is EXPECTED to provide this, and if they don't either the user doesn't know enough to get it, and askes someone else for help, or knows enough to figure out that www.warez-cracks-hijacking-your-game.com is not a good site to get things from.

    5. Re:Well.... by D'Sphitz · · Score: 2, Insightful
      When it comes to viruses, whoever is using the OS that is in the majority will be part of the problem. The reason that virus writers write for Windows is that most people are using windows. If most people were using Macs then there would be a lot of viruses written for Macs.

      Insightful? How about redundant? This exact same thing is regurgitated in every single discussion with a mere mention of a virus.

    6. Re:Well.... by Angry+Pixie · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I for one am not going to push for Longhorn. Longhorn is going to be an evolutionary change over what Windows has been according to Microsoft. I may need to look elsewhere if Windows XP will be my last Windows OS for years to come. I can't go Apple since I've invested a lot in PC hardware and software. With Longhorn, I'll have to deal with the possibility of some or all of my important apps breaking under the new Windows. Plus, I have to deal with Microsoft's new vision of security and digital rights management.

      Mod me offtopic... Windows and Windows software is insulting. No, it doesn't suck. It's very good, but it's insulting. UNIX is the same way. It used to be I could just pop in my software, install it, and begin operating it. At most I'd have to supply a serial number. Fine.

      But now, the act of purchasing, installing, or using Windows software forces me to put up with accusations of fraud and theft. Please comment if the following list of insulting behavior is incomplete:
      • Diskettes that eat themselves after a specific number of installs or that hard-code user registration info onto the original distribution media
      • CDROMs that are encrypted, preventing me from making legitimate backups
      • Software that won't load unless I have a security dongle, a special diskette, or the original CDROM
      • Software that requires
      • activation
      • Software that secret connects to servers behind my back
      • Software that requires me to allow it to connect to a home server to verify my serial number on each use
      • Software that locks itself down to my hardware
      • Software that installs secret files to prevent me from reinstalling it without a format -> Fuck you, VBOX!
      • Software that tries to verify my ownership each time I update it

      It's reasonable that software publishers want to curb piracy, and I know that these methods can be effective at preventing regular people like me from stealing. But Windows users have come to accept this presumption that we are criminals trying to take advantage of some poor software publisher; that we are not to be trusted; that we should be prevented from doing anything bad with our computers. Maybe some of us are, but I don't like being put in an adversarial position vis-a-vis my software and my computer. Essentially I have to provide picture ID everytime I want to do something new on my computer - and as a hobbyist, I enjoy doing new things. All I ask for is that Microsoft trust me and show me respect as a registered user who has owned every version of Windows and Windows NT since 1.0. I also ask the same of other other software companies too.

      Imagine if restaurants behaved the way software companies did everytime we wanted food.

      Here's where I believe the true benefit of Linux and FreeBSD comes into play. Open Source advocates talk proudly about freedom, but I haven't heard anyone address dignity attacks Windows users regularly submit to. When I install Linux, I know that, with a few exceptions, I won't have to deal with the issues I listed above. I know there are no real deep pockets in the Linux business, but someday I would like to see a national advertisement for Linux aimed at desktop users where the central point driven home is that personal computer users can gain back that dignity they lost over the last 15 years. Flame away.
    7. Re:Well.... by Monx · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The point is that the worms targeted IIS and MSSQL as opposed to Apache and whatever DB is most popular on webservers. This means that the worm writers chose a less popular but more vulnerable target. This factual evidence was presented to counter the supposition that *nix worms would become popular if *nix displaced Windows on the desktop.

      To put it simply, *nix owns the server market, but server worm authors target Windows. There is no guarantee that if *nix ruled the desktop, desktop worm authors would suddenly stop targeting Windows and start attacking *nix machines.

    8. Re:Well.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      If you consider that most viruses are spread via email, then this is patently false.

      In *nix, you can't receive an executable attachment. You have to explicitly define a file after being saved as executable. There's no .EXE.

      Also, another part of Windows is that any EXE running on it is pretty free to wreak havoc due to poor file system security. Sure, Microsoft finally plans to fix this with Longhorn. The point, though, is that if *nix were 90% of OS, they might be the number one target of viruses, but the two most fundamental flaws of Windows they exploit today wouldn't exist.

      It's oversimplifying it to say that Microsoft is getting all the viruses because it is the most popular. You only need to look at the methods of the email worm exploits, and how one would try such a thing on *nix machines to see that *nix things would be different if *nix were targetted instead of Windows.

      Is this to say that *nix wouldn't be vulnerable? Of course not. As someone who went from 100% Windows to 50% Windows, with 100% of servers running on *nix, I can say I sleep a lot better at night now because I understand the fundamental differences in security between the two operating systems.

      It's also worth nothing that I was a Nimda and Nimda II victim through IIS, before I threw IIS out the window.

  2. Cue the Microsoft Bashing by Pave+Low · · Score: 1, Insightful
    Bill Gates talking about Security = One Huge softball for a flamewar.

    I seem to remember this site used to focus on Linux, with only the occasional Microsoft-bashing article. Nowadays, it's completely the opposite.

    Maybe perhaps michael and the editors are just trying to generate the extra pagehits and flamewars that Microsoft brings.

    --
    SIG:Slashdot: indymedia for nerds.
    1. Re:Cue the Microsoft Bashing by EpsCylonB · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I seem to remember this site used to focus on Linux, with only the occasional Microsoft-bashing article. Nowadays, it's completely the opposite.

      I thought this was a site that dealt with computing and technology, what exactly is wrong with this article ?.

  3. Thoughts on Gates by DarkHelmet · · Score: 5, Insightful
    and says that Microsoft is 'working with microprocessor companies, including Intel and AMD, to help Windows...support hardware-enforced data execute protection (also known as NX, or no execute)

    Excuse me, but Intel's ripped off 64-bit system has no sort of NX bit on it. That is the primary difference between AMD and Intel's 64 bit x86 implementation.

    What I'm curious about is if this statement from Gates is a forward statement. Does this mean that Intel will adopt the NX bit within the next year or so? Hopefully this will be the case.

    I can imagine with this in place, I imagine a lot more of the script kiddies will be doing "Nuke" style attacks rather than full-on hacks. In this case, say if Apache were to have a buffer overrun exploit, the most that would happen is the service would be shut down. Still a pain in the ass for anyone trying to run a web server, but better than running a service that potentially grants access to your machine.

    That and worms will hopefully not be so rampant anymore, provided that people stop opening exe email attachments. Don't we wish.

    Gates said Longhorn is 'not a date-driven release.' and said the speculation that the operating system will come out in 2006 is 'probably valid.'"

    Well, what exactly is the one "must-have" feature in Longhorn that makes it necessary today? Nothing really. A database-driven file system is not necessary. Internet Explorer 7 is not necessary (at least if you have Firefox it isn't). More DRM? Not necessary. What's necessary today are security fixes. And as long as Microsoft keeps patching WinXP, Longhorn is not needed anytime soon.

    What is necessary now is SP2. And the sooner they release that, the better.

    --
    /^[A-Z0-9._%+-]+@[A-Z0-9.-]+\.[A-Z]{2,4}$/i
    1. Re:Thoughts on Gates by twigles · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Agreed. At this point we don't really need more innovation from MS. What we need is a steady improvement of what they have already done. Clean up the code for speed, stability and security. Firefox is a great browser, iTunes is a great mp3 player, etc. Even some of the MS-made stuff is good like windows media player. The problem is MS doesn't make money off of patches and code audits.

      Most normal people I know want to log in, work/play, then leave and live their lives, they aren't waiting for MS to define a new hobby or lifestyle for them.

    2. Re:Thoughts on Gates by DarkHelmet · · Score: 2, Insightful
      No version of windows was ever necessary -- but it has always been better than what came before it.

      You mean like how Windows ME is soooo much better than 98? Heh.

      --
      /^[A-Z0-9._%+-]+@[A-Z0-9.-]+\.[A-Z]{2,4}$/i
    3. Re:Thoughts on Gates by demachina · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Something I haven't seen mentioned much is this is most likely a strategy to apply the Netscape sanction to Symantec, McAfee and all the other companies making a good living on security software.

      As soon as Microsoft starts shipping anti virus and firewall software with Windows for free there is a pretty good chance people will stop paying for it. Security companies will then follow Netscape down the road in to oblivion. They might hold on for a while thanks to brand loyalty and if their offerings are superior to Microsoft's early versions, but its probably just a matter of time before Microsoft's free offering gets better technically and free is always better than "costs money" as IE proved over Netscape and Linux is trying to prove over Windows. Its also no secret Microsoft has been on a hiring binge for security talent so they probably have the talent to compete. They certainly have the R&D resources.

      In fairness, Microsoft may be doing this partly because it realizes it has to solve its security problem because its pissing people off and its pissing governments off especially as fixated as governments are now about terrorism and cybersecurity.

      But Microsoft also realizes there are billions of dollars pouring in to pockets that aren't theirs for security software. As in so many other markets if they bundle the same functionality with Windows for free, they put these other companies out of business. They can then jack up the price of Windows, or use some licensing scheme to redirect these billions in to there pockets because there are billions of dollars in IT budgets no longer going to security companies.

      --
      @de_machina
  4. I don't think that I like the idea of MS... by rune2 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    telling me what I can and cannot run.

  5. Maybe Theo could help? by ChiralSoftware · · Score: 5, Insightful
    OpenBSD has had "W^X" for quite a while now, and it sounds like that is what Bill is talking about. It is a great idea. There is just no reason for a program to ever modify its own executable code, with a very few exceptions such as Java's JIT compiler. For once it sounds like he is talking about security that protects his customers, not "security" such as DRM which reduces the capabilities of the product.

    --------
    Create a WAP server

    1. Re:Maybe Theo could help? by Fapestniegd · · Score: 5, Insightful

      There is just no reason for a program to ever modify its own executable code.

      Apparently you've never written an anti-piracy wrapper for a Windows application.
      That's how the good ones do it, by decrypting/modifying thier own binary code section in memory.
      I guess as a GNU advocate, there is no need for anti-piracy programs,
      but some people butter their bread writing software and they can't just give it away.

    2. Re:Maybe Theo could help? by Mr.+Piddle · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I guess as a GNU advocate, there is no need for anti-piracy programs, but some people butter their bread writing software and they can't just give it away.

      Piracy is really and truly overrated. People who do pirate software would not have ever paid for it in any case. Do you really think some farmer in China is willing to pay $50 for software? How about some random high-school student? How about a bureaucracy-constrained lackey, who would spend literally thousands of dollars to push through the hoops to buy that $50 piece of software (instead, they buy $50,000+ of Oracle and WebLogic)?

      The existing legal climate works well to inhibit well-intentioned people from prirating. It is important for business people to feel legitimate with respect to their software, because it is an easy and inexpensive way to reduce risk. People who sincerely do not care about risk are in the minority.

      Worst case is that pirates are free word of mouth advertising.

      --
      Vote in November. You won't regret it.
    3. Re:Maybe Theo could help? by Lehk228 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      you mean the ones that take a week for a crack to come out for instead of a day? anti-piracy code is worthless appeasement of PHB's, Please let me know what software runs your decryption wrapper every time it is executed so i can avoid the wast of CPU resources, SOFTWARE PIRACY IS IMPOSSIBLE TO PREVENT IN A STAND-ALONE APP. The only programs that are tough to pirate are apps that connect to a server suchas online games (UT2Kx, Everquest, Starcraft, etc) but even then you get people running pirate servers. If you want people to pay for your software either provide a benefit for doing so (quality support, online play) or make the price low enough that people will see it as worthwhile to get a legit copy.

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
  6. Don't Forget About Price by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Tell gates not to forget about lowering prices. This will help slow the move from Windows to Linux as well.

    Price and security both need to be priorities for Microsoft. Both price and security are BIG TIME negative aspects of owning Windows.

  7. Protected Stack hardware requirements? by ponds · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why does a protected stack need hardware modification ? IANACE, but doesn't OpenBSD do this on standard hardware? As much as I don't like substanceless MS criticism, and as much as I want the status quo's platform to be secure; I really think that actions speak louder than words, and while SP2 is a big step in the right direction, how about: 1. Ditching ActiveX, does anyone actually use this for anything other than malware anymore? 2. Disabling the (Outlook) preview pane by default 3. Higher SSL Verbosity with IE 4. IE URL-bar and statusbar should go into an "extra careful verbose mode" when it encounters hexadecimal encoding ( % ). IMO, these are all obvious things that should have been changed LONG ago, why are they still defaults?

  8. also by Beer_Smurf · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What wasn't said
    "....and if anyone makes a workaround for the NX feature to install Linux we will be able to use the DMCA to thwart them."

  9. Never admit ! by Onan+The+Librarian · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I read Gates's comments a few days ago and noted that at no point does he even come close to admitting that every virus, worm, or other exploit that hits Windows is able to do so because Windows own code has made it possible. "Windows security" should be used as a perfect example for a dictionary definition of an oxymoron.

    Seriously, with approximately sixty billion dollars in the bank, exactly what prevents M$ from producing a secure OS ?

    1. Re:Never admit ! by Keeper · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Seriously, with approximately sixty billion dollars in the bank, exactly what prevents M$ from producing a secure OS ?

      The same thing that prevents game programmers from comming up with crack-proof copy protection.

    2. Re:Never admit ! by Diamon · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Seriously, with approximately sixty billion dollars in the bank, exactly what prevents M$ from producing a secure OS ?
      Perhaps a lack of a company producing an existing closed source secure OS for them to buy up.
    3. Re:Never admit ! by real_smiff · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Seriously, with approximately sixty billion dollars in the bank, exactly what prevents M$ from producing a secure OS ?

      OK let me take a crack at this.
      Because they are trying to come up with a very usable OS. 'Easy to use' and 'Secure' are to some extent mutually exclusive. Not totally, but it's a balance, and in the same way as airplane mnfrs famously sometimes don't make improvements to the safety of their 'planes until after the crash, MS hasn't made the necessary changes until after worms etc. got really bad in 2003 and they started losing customers. This doesn't mean they won't make the changes and continue to do well (no I'm not a Microsoft fanboy).

      --

      This is my Sig, this is my Gun. One is for Slashdot and one is for Fun.

    4. Re:Never admit ! by the_weasel · · Score: 2, Insightful

      God. Sometimes people piss me off.

      Game developers? Game developers don't care about copy prevention. Publishers don't develop it either. Third parties sell it to publishers under false pretenses and nonsense that breaks down to "every time someone copies your discs, you lose money."

      Nothing cvould be further from the truth. Indeed, everytime my software is copied and used illegally, the customers who actually paid for my software lose money (not just me).

      If someone copies my software, and uses it as it was intended to be used, they have not only stolen the use of that (non-free) software, they have diluted the value of the investment my legitimate clients have made.

      In other words, If I allow easy, blatant copying of our software, then the value of my tool actually decreases, because my legitimate clients will find themselves competing against people who didn't pay the price, and in order to compete they will find themselves needing to steal the software instead.

      Our software costs 5,000 US (and its worth it) - and you can be damned sure that client's who paid that price deserve my undivided attention in ensuring that people who didn't pay can't use my software without having to crack it first.

      In other words, the protection is there to make sure that anyone who runs my software without a legitimate license MUST be doing so intentionally, and maliciously.

      We don't write software for charity, monkey boys. We do it because there is a tool (or game, or application) that needs to be made, and we were the ones to do it. That took time, and if I plan to feed my family, I need re-imbursement for that time.

      If you want free alternatives to the tools (games, applications) we make, then make your own. I applaud the many open source and free software initiatives that do so. Thats competition, and competition is healthy.

      If the price I charge for my software is way way out of line with it's value, then you won't buy it, and I will have to lower my price, improve my product, or go out of business. If you can't find a cheaper tool to do the required task from another source, then the price I charge for my software is probably fair.

      The world does not exist where we could remove copy protection and still expect to make sales. Don't try to pretend that it does - that position is clearly naive.

      That the copy protection is easily broken is irrelevant - the fact that it exists at all is an indication that we did not intend to let this software be copied in any trivial fashion.

      --
      - sarcasm is just one more service we offer -
  10. Re:The REAL security problem in '04 by Moofie · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And I suppose that all the people who buy Macs because they're a better solution for their needs are just victims of the reality distortion field, and should be first against the wall in the New Purge. All those scientists who are transitioning to OSX as their research environment are just ignorant.

    You, sir, are an asshat.

    A properly designed system is not harmful to other properly designed systems. Windows is not properly designed. OSX (and BSD and arguably Linux) are properly designed.

    --
    Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
  11. Re:The REAL security problem in '04 by Lane.exe · · Score: 5, Insightful
    When's the last time you used an Apple computer? OS X is able to do so much automatically because hardware parameters are generally known when using Apple or Apple-trusted hardware. Configurations are a snap because there's no gamut of odd brands with odd settings floating around out there. The only things that one takes the time to configure are things like non-Apple mice, wireless cards or printers. Everything else is pretty much a simple set-up operation. This isn't because Apple is trying to make stupid users, but rather because it allows intelligent users to manage their systems easier.

    I KNOW how to spend all day trying to configure various things and optimize them for security and use. However, sometimes, I don't feel like reading through piles of security docs just to make sure I can feel safe plugging my computer into a cable line. It's nice to have things just work, and work securely, right out of the box. Apple, however, has provided an operating system whereby I can spend endless hours tinkering with settings, in both a CLI and GUI environment; but by no means do I have to do this in order to get my computer working securely. The best thing you can do for a clueless user who just wants to check e-mail is get them an eMac or iMac. No fancy cables to plug in, no massive suite of security software to install -- just turn on OS X's firewall (built on that rock solid BSD standard ipfw), set up mail.app for their e-mail and get Safari or Mozilla Firebird to start blocking popups. Instantly, they're secured against anything except a direct, targeted attack against their computer. Worms, trojans, spyware... not a problem.

    --
    IAALS.
  12. Re:The REAL security problem in '04 by BWJones · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Apple computers are created for, and solely used by people who know, and want to know nothing about computers, the "proudly ignorants".

    Ah, but they are also used by the most advanced computer users out there. Those that use them for a variety of fields in science from quantum chemistry to astrophysics, medicine and computer science. Pretty impressive that.

    This is a dangerous mindset to encourage. Their computers are set up to do everything for you, to treat the user with a kind of benevolent contempt.

    What is a dangerous mindset? Allowing people to be connected? Allowing them access to information? What are you going to say next......That people should not be able to vote for whom they want?

    As to doing things for you, yeah, when I want to plug in a hard drive, it is automatically mounted and I don't have to type in the CLI two or three lines of commands to get it mounted and shared. There are many other examples of this and why you perceive this as benevolent contempt completely escapes me.

    Some recent pricing of upgrades illustrates the kind of attitude Apple has to its customers.

    This leap of logic is confusing. And what recent pricing are you referring to? Can they not expect to make a profit on their investment? Be thankful Microsoft has some minor competition, or else you might be paying more than you might think.

    --
    Visit Jonesblog and say hello.
  13. I don't know, but... by bonch · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Slashdot posts every single letter, lecture, and little throwaway statement Bill Gates in order to give the "M$"-bashers something to froth over.

    Absolutely nothing new will be offered in the discussions for this article.

    Meanwhile, Gentoo, Debian, GNU (twice!), and Gnome have all been hacked in the span of the last six months, and LinuxSecurity reports dozens of vulnerabilities for each distro every week alone.

    It will always boil down to this--security as a criticism against Windows will always be something that's only valid to other Slashdotters. Most of the rest of the world doesn't see it that way, and the rational of us see it as an admin and user ignorance problem. When Slashdot posts articles with titles like "Another New Microsoft Hole" and it turns out to be a user-ran executable attachment worm (yes, this was a real article), or "Microsoft Violates Human Rights In China" simply because Windows is used by the government there (never mind that China has its own custom Linux distribution, but I doubt we'll ever see "OSS Violates Human Rights In China"), I can only shake my head and just wait for the next cool technology article.

    Becuase that's why I first started coming to Slashdot--the cool tech news. Not "let's fill our daily quota of one 'bash M$' article per day." I used to go to K5 as an alternative because of the interesting tech articles that didn't get posted here, but at some point K5 became a liberal anti-Bush administration site. This place has become an anti-RIAA, anti-M$ site. I miss when there was no agenda other than being a cool site for nerds to get news on the latest Stallman lecture, Linux kernel technology, or programmer interview.

    1. Re:I don't know, but... by nathanh · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I miss when there was no agenda other than being a cool site for nerds to get news on the latest Stallman lecture, Linux kernel technology, or programmer interview.

      You know, I was thinking you were a troll (or at the very best, a malcontent) up until that last sentence. Then I realised I agreed with you. I also miss the days when Slashdot posted an interview with a kernel programmer or discussed the latest gadgets. It seems these days the articles all have an anti-establishment theme.

      Perhaps the Slashdot editors have let success go to their heads. They think that their larger audience means they have a greater responsibility to report on the "important stuff". Unfortunately the Slashdot editors don't limit the "important stuff" into the YRO category, so you can't easily turn it all off.

  14. Re:The REAL security problem in '04 by naden · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You troll .. and to the mods your no better.

    I think most people will agree most security problems boil down to one simple thing, the stupidity of the user

    Your missing the whole point. The users aren't stupid - they don't care. Computers are not an integral part of their life as they are probably are for you. Hence implying they are stupid because they can't spot a virus is just plain rude.

    I have to ask if you know exactly what happens and what to do if your car suddenly stops for no reason. Does it make you an idiot if you have to ask for help ? No because for most cars are a tool not a lifestyle - just like computers.

    Apple computers are created for, and solely used by people who know, and want to know nothing about computers, the "proudly ignorants".

    Now that Apple is *nix based I find this kind of statement quite suprising. What a bunch of proudly ignorant people.

    Apple computers yes do have the obscurity security benefit, however they also have intelligent default settings. Windows with XP SP2 will finally set the defaults to what they should have been from the start.

    You are the ignorant one not the non-techie users.

    --
    Funtage Factor: Purple
  15. Here's the "innovation" to fight worms by netringer · · Score: 4, Insightful
    It would be easier to kill worms if users didn't run attachments. It would help more if they didn't type in passwords for .zip files that are contained in .gifs so anti-virus programs can't see it in the message text.

    But, here's an idea! What if the email program DIDN'T EXECUTE SCRIPTS WRITTEN IN BASIC!

    Hey, Bill, here's some code that will kill worms dead:
    Safe and Secure
    Unlike many other products, Mozilla Thunderbird doesn't allow scripts to run by default.


    How long will it take until Microsoft dips into the Outlook code and stops the running scripts in message attachments?

    Maybe never. They'll just build rarely updated "after the fact" virus scanning in the next XP service pack! Yeah, that'll do it.
    I won't need it. I use Thunderbird and Mozilla Mail.

    --
    Ever dream you could fly? Get up from the Flight Sim. I Fly
  16. Re:Come on Spinner .. i mean Linux by bonch · · Score: 4, Insightful

    With Longhorn only coming out in 2006, hopefully Linux will make a huge push over the next couple of years to cement itself as a serious 'business desktop' platform.

    People were saying this around 2002. Two years later, and KDE and GNOME are still pretty much the same, slowly taking evolutionary baby steps.

    Longhorn is going to be entirely .NET and include things like Avalon, Indigo, WinFS, and so on. I guess what I'm saying is Microsoft is actually pushing to do a revolutionary release--this will be the same kind of change going from Windows 3.1 to 95 was.

    Plus, I think Slashdotters ignore that people have Windows software and won't magically dump it all and switch to Linux simply because the next version of Windows is due out in 2006 instead of 2005. I see no signs whatsoever that signify Linux is going to make some sort of great stride in the next two years. In fact, things look much the same as they did two years ago, except that KDE and GNOME have, like, more buttons and stuff, and now we're supposed to be switching away from DevFS or something in our production kernels...

    Personally, I think Apple is making incredible headway lately. They're Doing Everything Right(tm). If anyone's making strides today and in the next couple of years, it's Apple. OS X just gets better and better (and subsequently ripped off...).

  17. Re:The REAL security problem in '04 by Jonny+Royale · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Interesting points, wonder why you got modded down?

    I'd like to add to what you've said and point out that there is a difference between stupidity and ignorance. Stupidity is not being able to learn somethiing. Ignorance is not knowing something, but it doesn't exclude the capacity to learn. Most people, when it compes to the intracacies of the PC, are ignorant, rather than stupid. And they want to be.

    For example, I don't want to know the specifics of which particular gasket a mechanic's going to tighten (or loosen) when he reapirs my car, I just want to get to work. I could, if I chose, get materials on automotive mechanics, find out this information, and be knowlegable, rather than ignorant, and even possibly do the repairs myself; but I have no need to know this stuff, so I remain ignorant.

    IMHO, This has been one of the fundamental failings of understanding of the Open Source movement, as they try and move from the hobbyist to the mainstream. Doctors, lawyers, and other professionals have too much to worry about in their own fields to concern themselves with makefiles, mount points, and other intracacies of Linux. And, quite frankly, a large number of people simply don't care to learn this stuff, any more than I care to know exactly what happens when I turn the ley in my car to get to work. I just want the engine to start, and use my fundamental driving skills to get to work, or home or to the bar, or wherever.

    Does this ignorance mean that I can't drive as well as someone who knows the full workings of an automobile? Certainly it does, however, there are indicators and saftey features in the car itself to protect me from my own ignorance.

    This is part of what Microsoft has realized. They realize that people want to know nothing about how their machines work, they just want them to work. That's why their now working on protecting the ignorant user, rather bothering with attempting to educate them. For these users, it's better to put the govenor on the engine, the automated seat belt, and the airbags rather than trying to teach them to use a turn signal when they change lanes.

    If Linux is going to embace the mainstream, they are going to have to embrace this ignorant user. Linux is going to need to be so simple that people aren't going to fear it anymore as a more complicated (albeit better performing, more stable and more secure) system than Windows. They're just going to put the cd in the computer, and drive away.

  18. Re:Release Dates? by DrEldarion · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Would you rather have a half-finished OS be released?

  19. Proudly ignorant or TCO-conscious? by G4from128k · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Apple computers are created for, and solely used by people who know, and want to know nothing about computers, the "proudly ignorants"

    Every extra hour that I am forced to spend learning how make make a computer do what it should have done in the first place adds $50 to the TCO of that machine. So if I have spend even one hour per week figuring out how to keep my machine safe from exploits, I've added $2500 to for the cost of that machine for that year.

    I am not proudly ignorant, I only realize that my time is limited and that spending it patching gaping holes in a badly designed product is not top of my list of either fun or productive things to do. At best, you could call me resentfully ignorant because I resent that ignorance should be a problem.

    I'm not even sure how you can blame Apple for much of the Internet's current dismal state of affairs. What percentage of viruses, trojans, spam, etc. are distributed via Apple machines?

    But, as long as we are playing the blame game, I might as well burn a few karma points. Lets add some more culprits to the list:
    1. All the IT vendors that touted software and internet services.
    2. All the businesses and organizations that listened to IT vendor's hype and gave PCs to all their employees.
    3. The original internet standards designer who gave us naive, overly-trusting standards that make it too easy for anonymous blackhats and spammers to send out untraceable virus packets and spam
    4. CPU makers (and Gordon Moore) for giving us such a rapid pace of performance growth that no platform ever matures before it is replaced by another exploit-ridden next generation OS

    I'm sure there are others.

    --
    Two wrongs don't make a right, but three lefts do.
  20. Re:Release Dates? by damiam · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You mean like every other Windows version?

    --
    It's hard to be religious when certain people are never incinerated by bolts of lightning.
  21. Re:The REAL security problem in '04 by AeroIllini · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well said, sir.

    Microsoft is constantly lauded by the press and the business world alike for bringing computers to the masses. A chicken in every pot and a Windows license in every home. And while that is a commendable feat, helping to spur the absolutely exponential growth of the internet and computing in general in the last few years, no one stopped to ask if the masses were ready for all this computing at their fingertips. Computers are powerful devices, and are becoming ever moreso with increased use of broadband internet. The potential for a computer to do serious damage is great, when the right person (or perhaps the wrong person, depending on your perspective) is doing it. The problem right now is that the computer companies are doing exactly what every business in our capitalist society *should* be doing with a home appliance: trying to make money. That, above all else, drives their product creation and marketing. The problem with this line of thinking for computers, which are more than just appliances, is there is no responsibility or accountability for consumer ignorance. Yet.

    Consider other home appliances: stoves, televisions, water heaters, automatic litter box cleaners. None of these things require a license to operate. Why? Because although they may be dangerous if used improperly, they don't really pose an immediate danger to other people; just the person operating the device. Since we as a nation believe that people should take responsibility for their own uses of these devices, only product warning labels, owner's manuals, and occasionally tech support are offered as education.

    Now consider devices that truly do pose an immediate danger to other people: automobiles. Because we are all driving on roads with *other people* and are a potential danger to them, we as a nation decided that drivers needed to be licensed in order to drive, i.e., there is a mandatory level of education needed before people are allowed to use the device.

    When personal computers were first introduced, they fell into the first category above. Each unit was separate. If you didn't read the manual and fried your hard disk, that was your problem. However, as we network more and more, and desktop environments such as Windows and Zero Install try to blur the line between working on your own machine and working as part of a network, computers are migrating into the second category. We're all driving on the proverbial internet highway. Now, if you are a clueless user who clicks every attachment in emails and forgets to install security patches, you are endangering the livelyhoods (if not the lives) of other people on the network. Even the responsible people can still be hammered: you can't tell me that mail servers running OS X are not slowed down by the deluge of emails from Windows boxes still running SoBig and MyDoom. No one is immune, and it translates to lost revenues for everybody.

    So what do we do to fix it? Do we mandate that computer companies educate their customers? No. That would be like asking car companies to teach their customers how to drive. How about the ISPs? Nope. They're just the toll booth operators. TThe problem is standards: the world of personal computers sprang up absolutely overnight, from a standards compiance point of view. Automobiles have had over 90 years with the same basic premise (gas, brake, clutch, steering wheel, internal combustion engine), and they have been refined to be compatible with each other. Take one driver's education course, and you can drive any car built. They can all run on the same fuel. They all fit on the same roads (current SUV trend notwithstanding). All of them have at least some interchangable parts. Yet there are dozens of car companies, each with its own set of designers and engineers. Computers sprang up so fast, with a new technological revolution every week, that standards compiance hardly had time to ask, "what the hell just happened?" As it is, we have several major operating systems, none of which run the same software (they all req

    --
    For security, the MD5 hash of this message and sig is 09f911029d74e35bd84156c5635688c0.
  22. Re:The REAL security problem in '04 by PowerPill · · Score: 2, Insightful

    IMO the other main player in the make-a-fast-buck-off-the-stupid industry has to be Apple computers. Controversial, but let me explain. Apple computers are created for, and solely used by people who know, and want to know nothing about computers, the "proudly ignorants". This is a dangerous mindset to encourage. Their computers are set up to do everything for you, to treat the user with a kind of benevolent contempt. Some recent pricing of upgrades illustrates the kind of attitude Apple has to its customers. While relatively unpopular, Apple computers can safely get away with this. But like "security through obscurity" it is not a policy that can scale safely.

    AOL and Apple are a twin prong attack on our Internet experience. Perhaps it is time to introduce a licensing scheme beginning with the users of these two products. We license Car drivers, because a bad car driver is a danger to others as well as himself. Increasingly it is becoming clear that inexperienced users must fall in the same category.


    Everyone is entitled to an opinion and I see the grains of truth you put forth. As Apple making for an easier/possibly better user experience by dumbing things down (Though OSX is as simple or complex as one needs it to be).
    But on the other hand I happen to use MacOS both pre X and OSX itself. I'm also a systems engineer who specializes in administering Linux boxen. Exim/LDAP, various flavours of Apache, Bind, CVS etc yatta yatta. I also write a lot of Perl and PHP and dabble in C. You make it sound as if all Apple products are like tonka toys compared to other systems and the comment about people who know nothing tend to buy Apple is simply preposterous. I tend to beleive that this is why Win is so popular in the first place because of those who simply don't or can't be bothered to know anything.

    I do use MS products all of the time as part of my profession but I've never chosen them for personal use and I don't say this because it's something to be proud of or anything. I just choose not to as I've always preferred the alternatives. They just make more sense to me and I personally find them more elegant. Though when I look back at my first comp (a commodore PET) I'd as sooner eat my own words but anyway... As a matter of personal experience I usually find users of other OS's than an MS OS to be more knowledgeable about the inner workings and limitations of their system of choice. As well it's pretty much agreed upon here that it's the users themselves that are helping spread virii and worms. By far and large it's the win users who are doing it so I don't see the relevancy of your attack on Mac users or even AOL'ers for that matter. It's not the internet connectivity that's the cause of the spread. Again it's the users. A person knows that they want to buy a computer. They go to the store and buy one. Naturally it has Windows pre-installed. A no brainer. But to actually go out and buy a system that is NOT the norm requires a bit more thinking especially if that system costs more than the norm which is usually the case.

    What I'm trying to say here is that the OS doesn't make people lazy, ignorant or stupid regarding computing. They are already predisposed for whatever reasons. No matter what system you happen to use, all basic concepts are the same across the line. Choice of platform is irrelevant and a waste of time to focus on such small details and minutae. A Win machine can be just as secure as a 'nix or Mac machine (which is a bit of a misnomer really because pretty much all worms/virri are wriiten for Win anyway) as it's simply a user's habits that the malicious count on. Simple as that. Nothing more nothing less. It's just common sense which to me doesn't seem to be so common anymore. Although I truly beleive that the OS of choice has nothing to do with anything here, I will say this to stay within context of your comments; For now just keep in mind who the people actually are that are making it so easy to sully your 'net experience before pointing any fingers.

  23. Re:By the time SP2 comes out... by BlueLightning · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Where are we going to be at in 2006? KDE 3.5 and GNOME 2.8, with the same old XFree86 technology running beneath

    You know, there's a flipside to that coin: if it ain't broke (which it mostly isn't), don't fix it. Unlike Microsoft, "we" don't have to do buzzword-laden feature releases on a regular basis.

    Free software isn't perfect by any means, but it's steadily improving. Besides, nobody really knows where we'll be at in 2006 - not even Microsoft can give you any guarantees on where they'll be then.

  24. Re:The REAL security problem in '04 by DarkVein · · Score: 2, Insightful
    For these users, it's better to put the govenor on the engine, the automated seat belt, and the airbags rather than trying to teach them to use a turn signal when they change lanes.

    I'm reminded of that solid metal car that Kinsman (the Grey Lensman, in E.E. "Doc" Smith's series) got into... the one that went 7000 miles per hour, was absolutely completely lightlessly black dark inside, had no seat belts or other cushioning, and was driven by an alien of a species that can "see" through solid matter. The accelleration was insane and he ran into everything on the way. Supposedly a severe bruising is in order if the driver "takes it easy" for "non-terrestrials".

    What I find interesting about Gates' ideas about security is that it perfect sense from his perspective. Nerf the hardware so the software can't do anything it shouldn't without authorization. That way, his development costs can go down because there isn't nearly as much that can go properly wrong when someone writes bad code. He doesn't have to spend as much on development, and his customers don't have to worry about his crappy development.

    It's a bit like industrial waste. No worries. We're saving money. (The science goes to waste, instead of the environment.)

    It's kinda funny. If Gates gets his way, he'll be able to offshore the majority of his software development to the cheapest bidder. He'll still need real computer scientists to design and research the future for Microsoft, but then he can hire bargain basement code monkeys to follow their design documents as closely as they can figure out. "If it compiles, it works."

    Windows Media Player 9--the future. (Can I kill myself now?)

    --

    I'm as mimsy as the next borogove but your mome raths are completely outgrabe.

  25. Only the ignorant? by MikeMo · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Oh, please, don't be so condescending. I'm a programmer, been one since 1978 (how old are you?) and I've been using Macs since they came out. Even have a Lisa. I'm the IT director at a company where we have about 30 servers, most of them Macs. The ones that aren't are running a variety of *nix, and one Windows Terminal Server. I've written TONS of code for DOS, for heaven's sake, and Windows since 3.1.

    Trust me, I am not "proudly ignorant". I use Macs because they're better. Period. I am not genetically defective, either. Jeez.

  26. Linux Security by MichaelKaiserProScri · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Here's an interesting though. Is Linux more secure and stable BECAUSE it is more difficult to set up?

    Linux makes few assumptions. You have to explicitly install and run things if you want them. There is no marketing pressure to force you to take features you do not want. Heck, you can even build your own kernel to include or exclude features. The "barrier to entry" under Linux is higher. So the majority of Linux installs were installed by somebody who actually knows something about a computer.

    Conversly, Windows is easy to install. Furthermore, since it comes pre-installed on most computers, it is REAL easy to install. Windows is not so much of a choice for most users as it is the failure to make a choice. Many of the people "succesfully" running Windows are "twelve o' clock flashers". (You know, those people who's VCR constantly flashes "12:00" because they have no idea how to set it.) Combine this with cheap, always on broadband and you have a recipe for disaster.

    You've heard of "Security through obscurity", well Windows suffers from "Insecurity through ubiquity"

  27. Re: The point everyone misses by Daytona955i · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think you underestimate users. People will double click, unzip and spend however long it takes to run any attachment they get. Even if their e-mail program or ISP or whoever says something like "The attachment is a virus... do not open it." They will still open it.

    Now, for most users, It's not the 2 clicks away is too far rule... it's called you need an administrator password to install anything rule. This is why people tell you to not log in as root. (and why the root account is disabled by default in OS X) Now when you double click that attachment and instead of opening a document, it prompts you with the password dialog box, alarm bells should start ringing.

    Oh and most archival programs will save rwx flags. So while it's harder to get a virus, never underestimate how stupid people can be.

  28. Re: The point everyone misses by JanusFury · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So on OS X, if I download a SWF file or a HTML file with embedded JScript, or visit a page with a Java applet in it, I won't be able to execute any of the scripting code embedded in those files unless I copy them to my hard disk and set an execute flag?

    Saying that forcing users to enable an Execution Flag on files before you can run them, is a 'security feature' is ignorant. There are plenty of plain file formats that can contain executable code in them, and an 'execute flag' doesn't do anything to solve that problem. All it does is inconvenience users. Word Macro Viruses were plenty effective even though you couldn't double-click a Word file and run it just like an EXE file.

    --
    using namespace slashdot;
    troll::post();
  29. Re: The point everyone misses by jaavaaguru · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I was talking about executable files (notice the word "executed" in my post). You're talking about interpreted scripting languages. If you don't want such things to be run, then either disable whatever "feature" causes them to be run, or choose to use software that simply doesn't run them.

    Java VMs (at least the real Sun versions) have a security policy which prevents applets writing data to anything other than the domain from which they came. i.e. if it came from the internet, it cannot read/write to any arbitrary part of the local filesystem unless you change the security policy manually.

    "Plain file formats" do not contain executable code. They might contain code that can be interpreted. A perl file downloaded from the Internet for example cannot be run by typing ./perlfile.pl until the execute bit is set. Running it using perl ./perlfile.pl is different, since the initial program being run is the perl executable, and it's not up to the shell to decide how to run the script.

    I'd agree that any point-and-click GUI that lets users run interpreted code from files like that is missing something in the security department.

    The execution bit being a security feature is a fact, not a sign of being ignorant.

  30. Re:Also also known as by MBCook · · Score: 4, Insightful
    What are you TALKING ABOUT? This has been around in computers for years. How in the world did this get modded up? The NX bit is one thing and one thing only: a controll to tell the CPU if code from a specific page of memory can be executed or not. It doesn't tie software/hardware to a specific computer. It doesn't take away your rights to run any program you want. It doesn't make you have signed software. It SECURES your computer from things like buffer overflows by making it so that arbitrary executable code that might get put into memory through a buffer overflow can't be executed. This has nothing to do with TCPA, Palladium, DRM, or anything else like this. I hope the meta-moderators make those "Interesting" mods you got as unfair. You are either a troll or an idiot.

    And AMD supports it first. They support it right now. Intel is dragging their feet on it. That's the reason I WILL be buying AMD and boycotting Intel (although there are others, this would be the main one).

    --
    Comment forecast: Bits of genius surrounded by a sea of mediocrity.
  31. Next Big Thing by salesgeek · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Couple of random thoughts:

    1. NX bit is not an end all in preventing mal code from running. It does limit some exposure.

    2. DRM is not guaranteed security as MS is trying to sell to the public. It does guarantee that fixing a hacked system will be sooooo much more difficult. A successful hack could rended someone's local data inaccessable. And we are sure to see version 1.0 type vunerabilities in bios, os and libraries for a while... eeek.

    3. MS providing antivirus, firewall and so on will not work out as competition between vendors has fueled a ton of creativity and generated some pretty amazing products. Let's hope this feature is like the backup software included with Win3.11 and 95 rather than IE.

    4. None of this really speaks to MS's most important and weakest security-wise product: MS Office.

    --
    -- $G
  32. Closing security loopholes != closing security mkt by jlusk4 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I can't get too worked up about the threat to Symantec et al. caused by MS closing their security loopholes.

    Those loopholes should never have existed in the first place. I think the fundamental unfairness is that we had to be saddled for a couple of decades with a P.O.S. "operating environment" because both MS and its customers were too short-sighted to get it right the first time.

    Also, no matter how much good faith effort is exerted to close security holes at the design and implementation levels, there will *always* be a need/market for an external security effort. Something like CERT won't go away. I can still imagine a healthy "security ecology", as organizations attempt to crack MS software and blackmail^W attempt to convince the rest of the world that the fix is needed.

    John.

  33. Re:"focus on security," eh? by Keeper · · Score: 2, Insightful

    once it's proven to work, then the bells and whistles get added.

    Unfortunately, once you add the bells and whistles you can no longer say with any certainty that the code still "works." Anytime someone touches working code they risk breaking it. Only way to avoid that is testing, which is as much of an inexact science as programming is ...

  34. Re:Oh please... by froschmann · · Score: 2, Insightful

    He isn't saying he is going to deduct it on his taxes dumass. He is saying that he is willing to pay more for a machine that will allow him to spend more time making money and less time fixing it. If his productivity increases, he will make back the difference.

  35. Re:Fine, whtever. by Mr.+Flibble · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Well I run several *nix servers, my home and office machine are both Win XP. I ave *never* been infected by a virus. Never.

    In the words of some of the security professionals out there(from the people at @stake and foundstone):

    If you have never been hacked [sic] you are either too small a target to be worthwhile, or, you have been hit, but are not good enough to notice.

    Amongst security professionals, you are rated good if when asked how many times have you been hacked in the last 5 years, and your answer is "once or twice". If it is "never" that is almost as bad as "lots".

    --
    Try to hack my 31337 firewall!
  36. Re:Working with AMD/Intel on NX ? by linuxbikr · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Not a misconception. The difference is in the fact that Linux usage encourages users to use a regular account that limits the destructive potential to their own data and locally installed programs, nothing more. Linux explicitly requires users to enter the system with administrator rights in order to modify the system behavior or configuration. Windows systems gives these powers to normal users by default in the name of "convenience".

    Second, there is a lot of variety in Linux installations even though they are all compatible in broad terms. Differences in what languages are available, permissions on what the user can run, where files are located, etc. And since the average Linux user isn't being spoonfed Microsoft "innovation", the average Linux user knows better than to open an unknown mail attachment and every Linux mail client will not do this by default.

    Linux distros don't run unneeded services out of the box by default (been that way for years). Most exploits in Linux take advantage of minor vulnerabilities (such as the Ramen worm which used a hole in the lpd print daemon to deface insecure Apache installations). Even then, without administrator (root) power, the damage these worms/viruses can cause is very limited.

    It isn't impossible to write a worm to affect Linux. Just difficult. And even when done, the vulnerability that made it possible is often patched within hours. Viruses are for all intents and purposes impossible to write for Linux without a root exploit available.

    The inherent design differences of Linux vs. Windows even with Linux installations becoming more prevalent and thus more inviting to attack will still keep Linux, *BSD and Mac OS X relatively safe from large scale, billion dollar attacks that run rampant on MS based systems. And if there is an attack, the Linux community will fix it and help educate rather than beg the government to create standards and blame the whole thing on customers rather than admit to plain crappy software engineering.

  37. He also said.. by jason.mitchell · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So? He also said .. "640K ought to be enough for anybody." - Bill Gates, 1981

  38. Re: The point everyone misses by jaavaaguru · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Technically, if it's embedded in an e-mail and runs itselfvia some scripting feature, and speards itself to other computers, it's a worm.

    Unix/Linux users are one step ahead of Windows as far as standard viruses go, but they're a long way off as far as worms go. I'm not aware of any mail clients in KDE or Gnome that support scripting, and if one did appear, I don't see why people would switch away from the current range of excellent apps like Evolution and KMail/Kontact.

    If one of those did start supporting scripting, I'm betting that enough people at the development end care, and the default would be to have scripting turned off.

  39. Re:Linux most-breached by SoTuA · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I guess you missed the study that Slashdot posted which stated Linux was the most breached OS on the net.

    There's a *BIG* difference between "a hacker 0wn3d my b0x" and "Some VB script 0wn3d half of the windows boxen on the internet, automatically, without any manual interaction from the hacker".