give it a rest guys.
has anyone ever actually been the victim of some
government/corporate/"the man" attack where they slipped trojan
openbsd binaries to you?do you have any idea how hard it really is to mount such an attack?
without being detected? and what's the trojan going to do? copy all
your secrets to their national citizen oppression center? how do they
get their nefarious packets through your firewall without notice?i've download openbsd onto various machines from at least 5 mirrors
using 9 isps in 5 countries over the course of 7 years. and you're
telling me that every single time, somebody out there was feeding me
the bad bits? because if they screwed up even a single time, i could
use the good machine to detect the tainted ones. get real.
| Alexandre Oliva | Re: Dual-Licensing Linux Kernel with GPL V2 and GPL V3 |
| Eric W. Biederman | Re: [net-2.6.24][patch 2/2] Dynamically allocate the loopback device |
| Ingo Molnar | Re: containers (was Re: -mm merge plans for 2.6.23) |
| Greg KH | [GIT PATCH] driver core patches against 2.6.24 |
git: | |
| Gerrit Renker | [PATCH 27/37] dccp: Integration of dynamic feature activation - part 2 (server side) |
| David Miller | [GIT]: Networking |
| Michael Riepe | Re: 2.6.27.19 + 28.7: network timeouts for r8169 and 8139too |
