Posted on 05/31/2002 3:15:28 PM PDT by Bush2000
A conservative U.S. think tank suggests in an upcoming report that open-source software is inherently less secure than proprietary software, and warns governments against relying on it for national security.
The white paper, Opening the Open Source Debate, from the Alexis de Tocqueville Institution (ADTI) will suggest that open source opens the gates to hackers and terrorists.
"Terrorists trying to hack or disrupt U.S. computer networks might find it easier if the federal government attempts to switch to 'open source' as some groups propose," ADTI said in a statement released ahead of the report.
Open-source software is freely available for distribution and modification, as long as the modified software is itself available under open-source terms. The Linux operating system is the best-known example of open source, having become popular in the Web server market because of its stability and low cost.
Many researchers have also suggested that since a large community contributes to and scrutinizes open-source code, security holes are less likely to occur than in proprietary software, and can be caught and fixed more quickly.
The ADTI white paper, to be released next week, will take the opposite line, outlining "how open source might facilitate efforts to disrupt or sabotage electronic commerce, air traffic control or even sensitive surveillance systems," the institute said.
"Computer systems are the backbone to U.S. national security," said ADTI Chairman Gregory Fossedal. "Before the Pentagon and other federal agencies make uninformed decisions to alter the very foundation of computer security, they should study the potential consequences carefully."
The standard MS paid-poster response is "I used to work for MS, now I'm just a stockholder". We had six or seven of them here until several others got banned for making threats to people who criticize MS.
I call them "The Ex-es".
Do a search of threads posted by Mr. Bush2k here. It's a long list of MS press releases.
If we had kill-files on this forum, he would be perhaps the sole occupant of mine, even if it did mean that upwards of 50% of the Linux relevant threads were blacked out.
The persona he presents here is not that of a truth seeker, but of an agenda pusher. Sad.
But he doesn't bother me much, I mainly feel sorry for him.
The ones that were *really* annoying were banned. InnocentBystander threatened to beat up people who criticized MS. Don Joe would post 5, 10, 15 insults an hour in a thread, never once discussing the actual topic -- and often threaten 'libel' lawsuits against anyone that criticized MS. MacAttack was another prize.
My personal favorite tactic of theirs was the lawsuit threats. I feel that's an automatic 'win' on these boards. When your opponent threatens to sue you, you've gotten to him!
From what I understand, the main goal of the paid posters is two-fold:
Were you around when MS started all this paid-poster stuff to trash OS/2 online, a million years ago? Thru usenet to the web to here, this is literally the 15th or 20th time I've seen the same M.O.
Pathetic, yes. But typically the paid posters have no actual skills, and paid liar is about the best they can aspire to in life.
Back in the hay days of OS/2 Warp, I was too busy enjoying using it to be posting on bulletin boards, about that or anything else. Though I do recall vaguely spending many hours posting on some board (Usenet? ... no ... CompuServe) concerning JPSoft's 4DOS.
All the more reason to have included comments. I really don't appreciate you calling me ignorant. I don't work for Microsoft, and never have.
The original claim, that "Microsoft programmers don't comment their code" was too broad, and was also said in way that I'm not surprised that others found annoying.
Any large body of code written by many people will have a variety of commenting styles, short of some effort to systematically strip comments or some other mass enforcement. One or two published examples prove little.
Since I don't work at or for Microsoft, and by his own admission, neither does gcraig, neither of us can claim knowledge of such systematic stripping. Indeed such seems unlikely to me.
"...as long as the modified software is itself available under open-source terms."I think the above is the important point with respect to national security. Why would anyone that cares about national security promote the idea of releasing all modifications back to the open source community?
Do you avoid buying padlocks from the popular commercial lines, because I could buy the same padlock, learn its flaws, and thereby gain illegal access to your property? No, having a market for padlocks increases the quality of all such padlocks, and reduces their price. What you don't do is tell me what you have padlocked, where, with what brand of lock, and what of value lies behind that lock. Obscurity as to the particulars of your situation helps you stay safe, even as you use widely distributed and publically available means to padlock it.
before you post "this study was bought and paid for by Microsoft", try providing some references ... or be prepared to be labelled an idiot. Dunno about that one. What do you think about this one? New Study Shows Widespread Acceptance of Microsoft Training Program (MCSE)
The Alexis de Tocqueville Institution, a public policy think tank located in Arlington, Virginia recently completed a study on the impact of the Microsoft Certified Systems Engineer (MCSE) training program. In a survey of human resource managers and specialists from Fortune 500, Inc. 500 and new NASDAQ listed tech start-ups, AdTI found:
"Companies are educating and graduating their own class of engineers for the technology revolution," says AdTI research fellow Jeffrey Hogg. "The success of this program is more far-reaching than we expected." |
It is really damning given that most of us - even technically sophisticated ones - spend most of our lives not giving much though to MS except ocasionally to curse the latest really enduring "feature" of their software.
First you say you don't know, but then you say it seems unlikely? Is that really logical? whadda cheap shot.
Then stop making such ignorant accusations. If you don't like the reality that you made an ignorant statement then only you can change it.
77 maybe, but not 78.
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