Matthew Crocker wrote:
We have all been through this before. Linux out of the box is generally no more secure than Windows.
I would disagree with that, but that gets into a religious argument. Really, however, the distribution involved with Linux is more critical than that it is Linux. Some distros are wide open, some are very secure out of the box. Again, however, this is getting into religious territory.
Linux can also be misconfigured and hacked. The reason why you don't see as many linux virus/worms is because there aren't as many linux desktops. Once Linux becomes a real player in the residential desktop OS market you'll see more and more worms/viruses running around because of it.
Except that logic doesn't work because Apache has a greater market-share than IIS, and yet we see many more IIS worms than Apache worms.
Now, I love Linux, I have 30 linux servers in production but it isn't the be all, end all to mass user security.
To misappropriate a phrase, "Its not magic pixie dust," I'll agree with you. -- Jeff McAdams "He who laughs last, thinks slowest." -- anonymous