> c) Make sure the bike looked not worth stealing
> d) Take the saddle with me
>
> (or the software versions of that
>
> a) Keep backups
> b) Not waste vast amounts of money on bogus security software
> c) Keep the system looking uninteresting
> d) Encrypt the data)
>
>> 'Inappropriate risks' nowadays is surfing the web and opening up mail
>> attachments that claim to be movies of dancing bears. I'd argue that
>> users have a reasonable expectation that these are things that should
>> 'just work,' and be safe, much as normal humans have an expectation
>> that their car isn't going to explode when they turn the ignition.
>
> Yes and its very clear from the things said by politicians that if the
> computer software people don't do this soon, the legislators will make
> very sure they do by stripping away all the techniques used to hide from
> liability for failure.
>
>> Perfect is the enemy of good, or words to that effect, right? My point
>> is that requiring perfection out of a security framework is a bar
>> that's going to be awfully difficult to reach (and when it supposedly
>> has been achieved, as in SELinux, mere mortals find it too troublesome
>> to run with as it's far too difficult to configure). Security can and
>> should be done in layers, and what one may miss, another may catch.
>
> Absolutely - but those layers should do whatever they do *right* and
> really do it, whether they are complex whole system controls like SELinux
> or simple network security tools.
>
> Alan
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