Quote from: mmk on February 15, 2024, 16:32:09The average person just wants to check email and watch videos on youtube. Why do they need to spend 1200 on a x86 windows machine, when for half the price you can get android/iOS that does the same thing, except with double the battery life, way lighter and no noise/heat? Not to mention far less chance getting virus or crashing.
Quote from: George on April 10, 2024, 19:25:25BTW: all that is needed to exchange email these days is ether a smart phone or a computer with a modern web browser.Not at all, if you are polling dozens of mailboxes with a bunch of rules, you will go crazy trying to poll everything in a web browser.
QuoteComputers that have older OS's don't "just stop working" because there are newer versions available
Quote from: NikoB on February 15, 2024, 14:47:52This is a blatant lie. The majority of the world's population uses a pirated version of Windows. They chose and installed Windows themselves because it is 100 times easier than installing and configuring any Linux distribution. As well as the presence of many convenient and commercial programs that can also be installed pirated. M$ managed to sell sales of no more than 30% of the desktop OS market, the rest of the share belongs to pirated installations, which M$, as I showed above, itself promotes, especially since 2015, when it actually allowed mass illegal (legally) activation on its servers and did nothing about it for 9 years. This clearly speaks of the company's policy - to retain the market at any cost, especially business, allowing massive pirate activations among the population
QuoteIf Linux distributions were so popular and easy to install/configure and were full of opportunities to install valuable pirated commercial software, everyone would have forgotten about Windows 15 years ago. But in reality, why are hardware manufacturers in no hurry to write proprietary drivers, much less open source code for the most modern hardware? Only under Windows and that solves everything. If you want modern hardware with full-featured drivers, install Windows. I constantly read forums and reviews of people buying equipment. And no one except specific developers installs Linux distributions if the laptop comes without an OS. And in my country, for example, laptops without OS account for more than 70% of the market. And still everyone installs Windows. Nobody needs free Linux, because Windows, in fact, for home, is also completely free. And the reliability and comfort in it are an order of magnitude higher for the average person.
So your Linux whining is belied by the ruthless reality in which Windows crushes Linux distributions, even when the laptop does not have an OS.
And it is for this same reason that Android easily defeated Windows Phone on smartphones - it was the first and did not depend on the previously accumulated code base. It simply wasn't available for smartphones. But Linux has no chance in the desktop OS market, unless M$ itself destroys Windows.
Quote from: NikoB on February 15, 2024, 14:47:52This is a blatant lie. The majority of the world's population uses a pirated version of Windows.
Quote from: NikoB on February 15, 2024, 14:47:52everyone would have forgotten about Windows 15 years ago.
Quote from: NikoB on February 15, 2024, 14:47:52M$ managed to sell sales of no more than 30% of the desktop OS market, the rest of the share belongs to pirated installations
if the laptop comes without an OS. And in my country, for example, laptops without OS account for more than 70% of the market.
even when the laptop does not have an OS.
Quote from: NikoB on February 15, 2024, 14:47:52unless M$ itself destroys Windows.
Quote from: NikoB on February 14, 2024, 19:32:00In Linux, the situation is the opposite - with the apparent presence of source code (but again this is not 100% code, but only part of it, since drivers (the most productive and fully functional) for actual hardware are also closed binaries),
Quoteits volume is as follows: that no one is able to carry out constant monitoring, i.e. audit of this code. Not to mention the gullible "average" users, for whom Linux a priori represents an extremely dangerous security sieve with an unknown number of third parties to whom their information is leaked
Quote. Unlike a commercial product M$, where the person responsible is known in advance.How would you know who the culprit is in advanced if the source of it is a closed source driver on windows?
QuoteGuess why people still refuse to choose free Linux in favor of the leaky Windows sieve? ;)Because people buy hardware? Linux isn't an option in most OEMs, if it is an option, it is a hidden option. Asking "Average users" to install operating systems is a bit stretching it
QuoteQuote from: A on February 14, 2024, 14:16:37Not really, that is only if you get a non-paid linux release. There are enterprise versions from Suse, RedHat and Ubuntu(through a plan) where they take legal responsibility as you are a customer and fully protected under the lawYou contradict yourself in previous speeches - this is NOT free software anymore! And this is NOT AVAILABLE to the "ordinary" user.
QuoteYou have gone in a vicious circle again. Do you remember where you started? That in the absence of developer responsibility to you, as is the case with free versions of Linux, you yourself are obliged to audit the code. But the "ordinary" user and even a professional are not capable of this, because... This task is non-trivial and extremely labor-intensive even for a team of professionals.
QuoteTrust someone in the modern world? This is just naivety and idiocy.That is why you don't trust in a single source, you have multiple webs of trust
QuoteThis is why the vast majority of the world's inhabitants choose Windows, despite its formal paid nature. Even in pirated installations, users are well aware that M$ has much more responsibility for the operation of the code than the community of Linux developers, who have no responsibility at all. Otherwise, everyone would have long ago fled to where it was more profitable, right? But users do not see any benefit in free Linux. And because of the reality of a completely leaky and poorly made OS and because of the lack of a lot of commercial convenient software, which can also be delivered in the form of a pirated installation and which is simply not available on Linux.The majority of the world never "chose" windows, it was chosen for them. As we saw with windows phone, most did not choose it over Android(Linux). Even MeeGo(also Linux) outsold windows phone in same markets it was released
QuotePeople are constantly looking for benefits and choose what they consider more profitable. It's simple. Linux lost miserably. It has not increased its share in the desktop OS market over the past almost 30 years. But Torvalds became a billionaire. He's certainly great.
Quote from: A on February 14, 2024, 14:16:37AVs sometimes handle these things by setting their own ssl certificate, then proxying everything through the AV so they can decode and ssl traffic and scan it for maliciousness. Of course that doesn't handle the privacy issueM$ doesn't care about these root certificates - they encrypt telemetry and who knows what else with their own hidden key (public), and only they can decrypt these messages transmitted by the OS to M$ with their private key. This is why even the coolest security analysts write that they cannot understand what kind of traffic goes into M$. If they know this, then only the intelligence services of those states to which M$ agreed to provide the OS source code and encryption keys. Guess what are the chances for an individual or a small-medium company to gain access to this? None. 0%. In Linux, the situation is the opposite - with the apparent presence of source code (but again this is not 100% code, but only part of it, since drivers (the most productive and fully functional) for actual hardware are also closed binaries), its volume is as follows: that no one is able to carry out constant monitoring, i.e. audit of this code. Not to mention the gullible "average" users, for whom Linux a priori represents an extremely dangerous security sieve with an unknown number of third parties to whom their information is leaked. Unlike a commercial product M$, where the person responsible is known in advance. Guess why people still refuse to choose free Linux in favor of the leaky Windows sieve? ;)
Quote from: A on February 14, 2024, 14:16:37But products are aimed at average users with options for those technical users who are more than capable of setting whatever setting they wantQ.E.D.
Quote from: A on February 14, 2024, 14:16:37Not really, that is only if you get a non-paid linux release. There are enterprise versions from Suse, RedHat and Ubuntu(through a plan) where they take legal responsibility as you are a customer and fully protected under the lawYou contradict yourself in previous speeches - this is NOT free software anymore! And this is NOT AVAILABLE to the "ordinary" user.
Quote from: A on February 14, 2024, 14:16:37You have gone in a vicious circle again. Do you remember where you started? That in the absence of developer responsibility to you, as is the case with free versions of Linux, you yourself are obliged to audit the code. But the "ordinary" user and even a professional are not capable of this, because... This task is non-trivial and extremely labor-intensive even for a team of professionals.Quote from: NikoB on February 14, 2024, 13:53:37Quote from: A on February 14, 2024, 07:27:04Blocking all network activity out of box is crazy for average users.Hahaha, leaky from the start, security is madness for the average user. But this means that the average user is an idiot.
But products are aimed at average users with options for those technical users who are more than capable of setting whatever setting they wantQuoteQuote from: A on February 14, 2024, 07:27:04You shouldn't give non-system apps root access to begin with. Linux requires that you enter a password any time you give root access.Hahaha and Windows too, if the user does not have Administrator privileges. The Yes/No question is asked only to those who possess them, but in reality does not protect him in any way.
Who at home will act as a system administrator if not the user himself? "A", as usual, is engaged in cheap demagoguery.
But the main user is generally the administrative user, and someone in your house/work/public place can run something they shouldn't. A yes or no is hardly secure.QuoteThe "average" user, unlike people like me, will not even understand where it is dangerous and where it is not. Therefore, he will stupidly click "Yes" to the UAC question. Most people don't even check unknown exe (binaries), at least on sites like virustotal. They just launch it and that's it, answering "Yes" to the UAC question, and then everything is elementary for the malware.That is the problem, OS have to be average user friendly but at same time have safe defaults. Pressing Yes is not a safe default. How many times I had to tell people to stop hitting okay to installing ActiveX components because people just kept hitting okay without thinking.QuoteEven the OSs themselves are malicious in this regard, until you explicitly create a physically independent firewall that blocks any unauthorized activity. In Windows versions, everything is done in such a way that M$ traffic is simply encrypted so as not to be blocked by such firewalls at the DPI level of analysis. This is exactly what professional security analysts write about.AVs sometimes handle these things by setting their own ssl certificate, then proxying everything through the AV so they can decode and ssl traffic and scan it for maliciousness. Of course that doesn't handle the privacy issueQuoteLinux is Babylon or an oriental bazaar, where there is a complete mess and there is no one to bear any security, much less legal responsibility.Not really, that is only if you get a non-paid linux release. There are enterprise versions from Suse, RedHat and Ubuntu(through a plan) where they take legal responsibility as you are a customer and fully protected under the lawQuoteAfter receiving EVERY new copy of the Linux distribution, the user needs to conduct a full code audit, if he can. But he can't do it 100%, no one can. And to this end, the issue of "security" in Linux is automatically closed as a loss for the user, as well as in the case of user vs. M$. The difference is that in the second case, at least in the case of a legal copy, the owner can still sue the company if they can prove that they suffered damage from their activities. And no agreements that contradict consumer rights laws and civil and criminal codes will help M$ lawyers. The only question is the difficulty of collecting this evidence, but this has already happened in history. But with Linux, there is no one to sue at all - no one is responsible for anything in it. You are on your own and all the developers don't even formally care about you...Again, you don't need to do an audit yourself unless you want to. Code is reviewed by multiple 3rd parties, from the code reviews when it is merged to security agencies and governments. When a release is made it comes with a checksum to insure validity
Again, there are paid versions of linux. You are confusing open source as all being free with no accountability, but that isn't the case. Open source licenses mostly just mean if software is distributed to you, you have the right to see the source code. That is all. If you buy an enterprise license from Suse, RedHat or Ubuntu. You have same legal rights as you would when you get windows
Quote from: NikoB on February 14, 2024, 13:53:37Quote from: A on February 14, 2024, 07:27:04Blocking all network activity out of box is crazy for average users.Hahaha, leaky from the start, security is madness for the average user. But this means that the average user is an idiot.
QuoteQuote from: A on February 14, 2024, 07:27:04You shouldn't give non-system apps root access to begin with. Linux requires that you enter a password any time you give root access.Hahaha and Windows too, if the user does not have Administrator privileges. The Yes/No question is asked only to those who possess them, but in reality does not protect him in any way.
Who at home will act as a system administrator if not the user himself? "A", as usual, is engaged in cheap demagoguery.
QuoteThe "average" user, unlike people like me, will not even understand where it is dangerous and where it is not. Therefore, he will stupidly click "Yes" to the UAC question. Most people don't even check unknown exe (binaries), at least on sites like virustotal. They just launch it and that's it, answering "Yes" to the UAC question, and then everything is elementary for the malware.That is the problem, OS have to be average user friendly but at same time have safe defaults. Pressing Yes is not a safe default. How many times I had to tell people to stop hitting okay to installing ActiveX components because people just kept hitting okay without thinking.
QuoteEven the OSs themselves are malicious in this regard, until you explicitly create a physically independent firewall that blocks any unauthorized activity. In Windows versions, everything is done in such a way that M$ traffic is simply encrypted so as not to be blocked by such firewalls at the DPI level of analysis. This is exactly what professional security analysts write about.AVs sometimes handle these things by setting their own ssl certificate, then proxying everything through the AV so they can decode and ssl traffic and scan it for maliciousness. Of course that doesn't handle the privacy issue
QuoteLinux is Babylon or an oriental bazaar, where there is a complete mess and there is no one to bear any security, much less legal responsibility.Not really, that is only if you get a non-paid linux release. There are enterprise versions from Suse, RedHat and Ubuntu(through a plan) where they take legal responsibility as you are a customer and fully protected under the law
QuoteAfter receiving EVERY new copy of the Linux distribution, the user needs to conduct a full code audit, if he can. But he can't do it 100%, no one can. And to this end, the issue of "security" in Linux is automatically closed as a loss for the user, as well as in the case of user vs. M$. The difference is that in the second case, at least in the case of a legal copy, the owner can still sue the company if they can prove that they suffered damage from their activities. And no agreements that contradict consumer rights laws and civil and criminal codes will help M$ lawyers. The only question is the difficulty of collecting this evidence, but this has already happened in history. But with Linux, there is no one to sue at all - no one is responsible for anything in it. You are on your own and all the developers don't even formally care about you...Again, you don't need to do an audit yourself unless you want to. Code is reviewed by multiple 3rd parties, from the code reviews when it is merged to security agencies and governments. When a release is made it comes with a checksum to insure validity
Quote from: A on February 14, 2024, 07:27:04Blocking all network activity out of box is crazy for average users.Hahaha, leaky from the start, security is madness for the average user. But this means that the average user is an idiot.
Quote from: A on February 14, 2024, 07:27:04You shouldn't give non-system apps root access to begin with. Linux requires that you enter a password any time you give root access.Hahaha and Windows too, if the user does not have Administrator privileges. The Yes/No question is asked only to those who possess them, but in reality does not protect him in any way.
Quote from: A on February 14, 2024, 07:27:04you audit changes.I have already asked the question 100 times - when was the last time a certain "A" conducted a code audit? Not to mention the average person. =)
Quote from: BBOGax on February 13, 2024, 00:32:50Hey guys I am thinking of Installing Linux on my laptop and Im wondering does it need Antivirus software like windows does? Look forward to hearing from you thanks.
Quote from: NikoB on February 13, 2024, 13:25:51Hahaha, it is generally useless against zero-day attacks and is a Trojan horse (another layer) in your system, besides slowing down the system for nothing. Only idiots install antivirus software.AV isn't useless, heuristic scans can sometime pick up zero day exploits. On top of that many AVs count the amount of files ran, and are more cautious if you run some exe that few others ran
QuoteLet me remind you that in Windows, all versions and in Linux, all popular distributions - the default basic firewall does NOT block all network activity except what is explicitly allowed. You need to force this filter to be enabled.Blocking all network activity out of box is crazy for average users. You are bound to run into more problems for average users if you block everything. I've seen no shortage of windows users accidently open up the firewall and think it is a good idea to "block everything" thinking they'd be secure only to complain why their apps aren't working. If you want full security, QubesOS Linux is what you want. You can open up apps with no network access
QuoteThe second security failure is that any software that gains root access can easily bypass firewall protection.
Thus, the firewall and the target system must be physically different devices to truly control risks. The firewall, in the OS on the target platform, can only control benign applications, but not malicious ones, that have received root access (a simple yes/no in the same Windows).
QuoteAuditing modern code is generally an impossible task for one person or even a serious team (and often the effort for an entire country, most countries of the world), especially if there is no 100% source code. And in Linux there are also no 100% sources of all firmware and drivers, if you want to have a system with up-to-date drivers and firmware for the most modern hardware.You don't audit the whole thing, you audit changes. And every commit is goes through reviews, both when committed and downstream
Quote from: asdff on February 13, 2024, 09:37:14NoHahaha, it is generally useless against zero-day attacks and is a Trojan horse (another layer) in your system, besides slowing down the system for nothing. Only idiots install antivirus software.
Quote from: BBOGax on February 13, 2024, 00:32:50does it need Antivirus software like windows doesNo