UK Banking Law Blames Customers For Insecure OS
twitter writes "If you use an insecure OS in the UK and someone drains your bank account, the banks say it's your fault. The Register reports: 'The Banking Code produced by the British Bankers' Association (BBA), and followed by most banks, makes it clear that banks will not be responsible for losses on online bank accounts if consumers do not have up to date anti-virus, anti-spyware, and firewall software installed on their machines.'" twitter went on to note that the majority of consumer PCs use an operating system with a history of security issues. Should end users be ultimately responsible for the state of their systems?
Should end users be ultimately responsible for the state of their systems?
The Microsoft Windows OS is not the property of the consumer using it. It is the property of Microsoft used under a license from Microsoft. If the usage of the OS complies with the license then surely any inadvertent behavior on the part of the OS is the responsibility of the owner (Microsoft) and not the license holder (the end user).
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And what happens if your bank is Egg (now owned by Citi Group) and tell you every time you log in that you should try the Egg Money Manager, which is only available as an ActiveX control? It's frustrating to keep telling users 'disable ActiveX' and have banks tell them to enable it (and use IE), and if they do then I think they ought to accept at least partial responsibility for the user's poor security.
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