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We Live In The Dark Ages of Internet Security, Says Kaspersky Labs CEO

An anonymous reader cites a report on TheMerkle: It is never a positive sign when one of the world's leading security firms mentions how the world is currently in the "Dark Ages" of computer security. That particular statement was made by Kaspersky Labs CEO Eugene Kaspersky during the NCSC One conference in The Hague. Enterprises and consumers need to step up their protection sooner rather than later, as the number of security threats keeps increasing. Update: 04/05 18:41 GMT by M :Reader Rob MacDonald has posted the following insightful comment (slightly edited for clarity and length): We're in the dark ages by design. We've allowed the alphabet agencies to compromise our security, at every level, including hardware. The one that doesn't have an exploit at shipping, gets intercepted and modified in transit. The encryption algorithms we've been using were compromised at such a level it took this long to see it.

2 of 83 comments (clear)

  1. Only if you force yourself to live in the dark. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    That's only true if you force yourself to live in the dark.

    If you don't want to, you can always use OpenBSD. If security is what you care about, then OpenBSD is your best choice. Its developers have proven time and time again that they put security first and foremost, and this has resulted in one of the most trustworthy operating systems to have ever have existed. Best of all, it's free and open source! There's really no reason not to use it, especially if you want and need security.

    The one thing that I think really sets OpenBSD apart from its peers is that the OpenBSD team will go out of their way to secure software they didn't even write. They'll fork, fix, maintain and improve third-party software that doesn't meet their standards. LibreSSL is a superb example of this, but they've done it with other software in the past, too.

    Nobody claims that OpenBSD is perfect, but it's as close as anyone is going to get today. As we become more and more aware of the risks that we face, it becomes clearer that OpenBSD is the operating system that's best poised to stand strong against these threats.

    OpenBSD is where it's at. If you want to live in the dark, then by all means ignore OpenBSD. But if security is what matters to you, then OpenBSD is the light.

  2. Yeah, do they remember the past? by JMZero · · Score: 5, Informative

    Does he remember the dance you had to do to install Windows 2000 on an unfiltered connection (if you didn't want it to be instantly owned)? You had to install completely disconnected, disable a bunch of services, and then try to connect and download patches as quickly as you could in order to get to a viable state. And everyone else's Windows computer you used had 9 layers of browser toolbars and adware and anti-anti-anti-adware that made their system effectively unusable?

    I'm sure there's lots of security battles to come - maybe even a World War or two - but the real dark ages of security are in the past.

    --
    Let's not stir that bag of worms...