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Re: OT: Nix less secure than Windows.
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And yeah, the list does seem to include a lot of beta fixes and the same fix for the same problem in multiple distributions needlessly... Not that useful of a list for basing any claims, other than software is insecure. And I'd like to know who Thermodyne is talking to that says Linux is secure because it is Linux. Any competent user of Linux is aware of vulnerabilities cropping up. Its insecurities are rarely as severe as Windows ones, but it of course it still has them... |
Re: OT: Nix less secure than Windows.
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Windows is the target of choice for botting and datamining for cc numbers and bank accounts. And while the people who do this are good, their resources are usually limited. Nix is more of a two fold target. The Apache side of it draws a lot of industrial attention and UNIX FreeBSD side is methodically under attack by foreign governments as well as the industrial regulars. Of late, one government in particular has been spending lots of time inside US computer systems. The main point of this post is not which is better, the point is that none of the Nix exploits ever get brought to the attention of the general public. |
Re: OT: Nix less secure than Windows.
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I also noticed some posts about the data being tainted to make Nix look bad. Perhaps you should do some research and then make an informed statement. CERT could care less about who had how many hacks. They just report them. Nix looks worse because of the way the community is organized. |
Re: OT: Nix less secure than Windows.
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Re: OT: Nix less secure than Windows.
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http://news.zdnet.com/2100-1009_22-6021867.html "The study is confusing and misleading. When you look at the list, the vulnerabilities are miscategorized," Mark Cox, a consulting software engineer at Red Hat, said. "For example, Firefox is categorized as a Unix/Linux operating-system flaw, but it runs just as well on a Windows platform. Apache and PHP also run just as well on both platforms. There are methodological flaws in the statistics." In addition, Steven Christey, an editor for Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures, an organization that maintains a common vulnerability database, said that the statistics were no basis for comparison of the relative security of Windows and Linux/Unix, because they had been collected from different sources with different criteria for the collection of flaws. ... Secunia thought that the nature of the reported vulnerabilities also made it difficult to compare security on the platforms, as Linux/Unix researchers concentrate on vulnerabilities in local privilege separation, while Windows researchers look at possible remote vulnerabilities. |
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