Proof, if proof is needed
That computer security is as much a user issue as it is an OS one
Ubuntu had to shut down five of its eight production servers last week after realising the poorly maintained systems were compromised to such an extent they had become a source of attacks against other systems. The servers were sponsored by Canonical but hosted by the community. The systems were running an old unsupported …
I could be wrong here, but aren't these just the community servers which provide the package support for ancient releases that Canonical have stopped supporting at all. Handy sometimes, but not for regular use.
When you select packages from these servers, you get warned thoroughly that the files might not be safe.
"Try reading it again and you will see that the cause is a HARDWARE issue. You can't upgrade the software if the hardware isn't supported, this applies to M$ as well!"
But any OS besides Windows is super special awesome and never needs patches/updates ever. Everyone knows that its only MS that is not secure and has viruses/hackers.
Thats what the Mac and *nix lot have been telling us for years. How useless MS was and how secure *nix was.....
Were we being lied to?
"But any OS besides Windows is super special awesome and never needs patches/updates ever. Everyone knows that its only MS that is not secure and has viruses/hackers.
Thats what the Mac and *nix lot have been telling us for years. How useless MS was and how secure *nix was.....
Were we being lied to?"
If you were being told that and believed it, then you were being gullible. If you seriously claim to have believed it, then I fear you may be being disingenuous. And just the slightest bit sarcastic, to boot...
One thing that always pisses me off is when a community is left in charge of something, a community generally full of know-halves and know-bits, with login details being "communityised" to get someone know knows the next bit involved. This is one of the greatest issue with the ubuntu community, they simply can't be trusted to do the kind of management of servers that proper techies like myself have been doing for years, bite the biscuit, hire a community server manager who can do the job and feel safe in the security of having someone who knows what they're doing at the helm.
Giving up on it because of hardware issues is the worst excuse in the world, especially when canonical give the ubuntu community a lot of financial support and could easily spring for some new hardware. Not only that but I can't see why any hardware 3+ years old would be broken now if it wasn't then. The linux kernel gets more drivers, not fewer, it supports more hardware every release, not less, the support gets better and better for hardware over time.. Unlike microsoft :P
Anon - I don't want to get my ass raped by the ubuntu community