On 04/17/2010 07:54 PM, jdow wrote: > From: "Sam Sharpe"<lists.redhat@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Sent: Saturday, 2010/April/17 13:20 > > > >> On 17 April 2010 21:05, jdow<jdow@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >>> From: "Sam Sharpe"<lists.redhat@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> >>> Sent: Saturday, 2010/April/17 02:25 >>> >>> >>> >>>> On 17 April 2010 10:17, jdow<jdow@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>> >>>>> <<jdow >>>>> How many people get frustrated with SELinux and simply disable it? >>>>> >>>> I don't know, but stupidity appears to be an infinite resource. I tend >>>> to believe that if you disable SELinux and you get exploited by >>>> something that SELinux would prevent, then the only thing at fault is >>>> *you*. >>>> >>>> However in this case, both a sysctl and SELinux prevent what this >>>> attack claims to do, so if you disable SELinux it still won't work. >>>> >>> Are you sanguine to declare Linux cannot be taken over by malware >>> given that the most recent rather dramatic hole found is less than a >>> year old AND new features (hence bugs) are being introduced every >>> day? How much is the data on the machine worth to you? >>> >> You seem to have a general problem with comprehension. That is not >> what I said - I simply said that the exploit you referred to wouldn't >> work. >> >> >>> If it means nothing, then why not run Windows wide open and make yourself >>> a hero to the botnet operators? {^_-} >>> >> Don't be an idiot. >> > I simply gave the extremes. And this discussion is not all that silly > considering "J. Random User" yclept Michael Miles has found a way to > get a virus on his machine that ClamAV might have detected on its way > in or from a scan. > > When giving advice it's best to presume the user is going to do something > unusual, such as run Wine, and receive an infection. A Wine install needs > ClamAV. Without Wine I'd suggest chkrootkit and rkhunter, at the least. I > have seen too many perhaps careless people ask "is this an infection?" And > in more than a few cases the answer has been yes. Linux is ahead in the > arms race. Windows is behind. Nonetheless, some protection is worthwhile > depending on how important your system's function, your relationship with > your ISP, and your data might be. I happen to be biased towards "very". > So I bristle when somebody suggests, intentionally or not, that Linux is > probably safe. So is flying, unless you happened to be on the last flight > of Pan Am 103, for example. Low probability of a high value loss - what you > do is your call. > > {^_^} > > I think that it is a must to have protection on your machines considering I am looking at a machine that was supposed to be bullet proof, and proved to be infectable with windows crap through wine. If you are running wine without protection then you are taking a chance. I am not sure how it happened but it did. The Virus even went to work renaming core files from the xp install So the myth is just that, a myth -- 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