On Wednesday 06 August 2008, Adrian Bunk wrote:Well, if you insist, but I must state that this mail represents my own opinion and not my employer's (that's because all the people I could consult with are sleeping :) ). Well, here is one attempt. A good percentage of an AV product's job is to prevent exploitation of a security hole in a product before the vendor (assuming the vendor admits it's bug and not a misuse of the product's features). Most distribution makers go through a lot of work before releasing an update, which might take days. Add to this the fact that some users refuse to update periodically (because one operating system out there shattered the belief in this practice) and that some of them are willing to pay to not care. This is reason enough for most AV vendors. In the present, on the Linux Desktop, this is [still] hypothetical talk and God help it will remain so. However, if there is one incredibly small chance that one (new?) type of malware can spread to a large number of users, then AV vendors will race for creating a solution because there will _definitely_ be people needing help with this (please notice that the IQ scale starts from zero and not from 130 :) ). I think this patch is trying to do what dazuko hasn't managed to do (yet): get into mainline. :) -- Mihai Donțu --
| Tarkan Erimer | Re: Dual-Licensing Linux Kernel with GPL V2 and GPL V3 |
| Arjan van de Ven | [Announce] Development release 0.1 of the LatencyTOP tool |
| Andrew Morton | -mm merge plans for 2.6.23 |
| Greg Kroah-Hartman | [PATCH 020/196] IDE: Convert from class_device to device for ide-tape |
git: | |
| Tantilov, Emil S | RE: [PATCH] net: sk_alloc() should not blindly overwrite memory |
| David Miller | [GIT]: Networking |
| Gerrit Renker | [PATCH 0/37] dccp: Feature negotiation - last call for comments |
