Posted on 07/15/2010 10:37:24 AM PDT by Zakeet
All your money are belong to us ... and we'll even collaborate with enemies of the United States to get more of it
Time to download Ubuntu.
I reckon XP will just have to do for now...
Should have given them Vista...
That ought to fix them Russkies!
“The case typifies the challenges law enforcement is going to have getting past encryption barriers,” Superintendent Hay said.
“My understanding is that Windows 7 has more encryption functions in it, which is problematic for us [police].”
Windows 7, which replaces the widely criticised Windows Vista, features advanced programs that can lock hard drives or portable flash drive files, allowing them to be accessed only by using encryption codes similar to those used in online banking.
The programs - BitLocker, which was featured in Windows Vista, and BitLocker To Go - were designed to help users encrypt files easily.
“All that needs to be done by the user is to right-click the device in the Windows 7 operating system and pick the BitLocker option from the menu that is popping up,” Microsoft says on its website.
While Microsoft affirms the “unbreakable” nature of its new encryption technology, the company disputes claims that criminals would successfully use the programs to lock out police and other law-enforcement agencies.
“Each time we have worked with law enforcement on any investigations we typically haven’t found BitLocker has been a hurdle to the investigation,” said Stuart Strathdee, the chief security adviser to Microsoft Australia.
However, he was quick to assure users this did not mean there was a way to crack the encryption.
“There is no back door under any circumstances; there is no way,” he said.
“In most jurisdictions that I am aware of, failure to disclose passwords, encryption keys and that sort of thing is also an offence and there’s not many people who will turn around and won’t disclose that sort of thing for fear of facing further charges.
“Criminals themselves are concerned about losing encryption keys or recovery keys and normally they are stored in fairly recoverable formats.”
Mr Strathdee said only a few criminals had successfully withheld their passwords and encryption keys from police.
“From the law-enforcement groups I have worked with, that typically hasn’t been a problem they have encountered and if it is we are not seeing it reported widely,” he said.
“I don’t think the number of people which would be involved in that [criminal] activity is significant enough for us to warrant not using it for the general encryption of personal information.”
Superintendent Hay said that wider society should not be restricted by criminal activity but he was concerned the rapid development of advanced encryption technology put police at a disadvantage.
“We certainly can’t allow society to be limited in the main by the negative actions of a few,” he said.
“While encryption protects users on one hand, it can make the issue of discovery of evidence more problematic.
“We have to take on running battles as we go. With another bit of kit with new opportunities we just have to deal with those as we go.”
The Russkies have had that source for years.
Yeah, but if the Russkies want to take down the U.S. are they going to infect/manipulate Windows or Ubuntu?
One primary difference between MS’s products and Ubuntu is the whole ‘security though obscurity’ thing.
Ubuntu doesn’t have a curtain to hide behind, and the Soviets are (per the article) behind MS’s curtain.
What good would your Ubuntu machine do you when there is no internet because all of the servers running Microsoft have gone down, all of the banks servers are down and there is no electricity on the national grid because all of the electric utilities run Microsoft.
At least I could still play chess on my computer.
Looks like it’s time to buy a better firewall.
Well we all have our priorities.
For me life would not be worth living if the Ruskies take down all of the windows machines.
I would just die if I couldnt play HALO with my online buds. ;)
Most of the internet backbone is non-MS based dedicated hardware. (ie, switches/routers, etc)
Reliability issues you know.
However none of them will work with out the electrical grid for long which I know is controlled with MS based machines.
How long do you think it would take them to switch to a non-MS based solution?
;)
Much more user friendly to guys like me that are new to Linux. I've tried a few of them and find Mint to be my favorite.
Ten years and ten billion dollars (maybe more).
I found just the opposite to be true. Although, the Mint I tried was Alyssa. Not sure if the newest distro is better.
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