Am 14.03.2014 20:31, schrieb Matthew Garrett: > On Fri, Mar 14, 2014 at 02:39:51PM -0400, Eric H. Christensen wrote: >> On Fri, Mar 14, 2014 at 03:00:20PM +0000, Matthew Garrett wrote: >>> If there's a default policy that would make sense for most workstation >>> users, we should just make that the default. If there isn't, how are we >>> going to educate users as to which choice they should be making? *I* >>> don't understand the terms used in the proposed UI, so I'd be willing to >>> put money on the number of potential users who do being pretty close to >>> statistically indistinguishable from 0. >> >> I'm all for creating a recommended hardening policy that users can opt >> into at install time. This feature would allow us to provide that >> kind of data to the end user. If the user decides to not implement a >> policy that would simply yield the same outcome as we have today. > > How does the average user make an informed decision about whether an > available security policy is appropriate for them? why is only the average user relevant? how do usesers get "advanced"? by notice things which sounds interesting, ignore them the first time, use Google and doing the same again no longer skip things my whole IT education and anything i am doing in ym current job for the last 11 years was learnt that way - by doing and *while* doing read details, but first it needs a start
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