From: "Patrick O'Callaghan" <pocallaghan@xxxxxxxxx> Sent: Thursday, 2010/April/15 13:31 > On Thu, 2010-04-15 at 13:02 -0700, Michael Miles wrote: >> Is Fedora really that secure? > > Even if we limit the discussion to email viruses, that's a very complex > and difficult question (to which the answer is "yes" :-). It's not an > attribute exclusive to Fedora as such, but to all Unix-based systems, > mainly for three reasons: > > 1) The mail client isn't running as root. > 2) Even when running as root, Linux mail clients won't blindly execute > attachments. > 3) Even for executable attachments, the virus is written for Windows and > won't run on Linux. > > Of course it's in principle possible to get past all the above barriers, > so *in theory* you can have a Linux virus, assuming the user is stupid > enough to run an unknown executable. As I say, I've never seen one in > the wild. > >> I come from windows and I am amazed at how not secure windows is. > > See (3) above. Most viruses are written for Windows as it's the most > popular platform. MS likes to pretend that's the only reason it gets all > the grief, but there are other factors. Patrick, the best AV tool of all is a savvy user given the number of social engineering attacks of late. And, at least historically, 'ix users have been quite savvy about security. That makes a huge difference. A single mistake running something you should not have because it looks important can bust your whole day. Based on the security forums I read I'd not consider Linux bullet-proof "today" - kernel null pointer dereferences and mmap are your enemy du jour. {^_^} -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines