Red Hat Summit (inspirational) keynote: You are here
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| Szulik told the audience that the discussion in the
| Linux and open source communities needed to undergo a
| shift in this age of social unrest from kernel-exclusive
| fare into the migration of data. "Start thinking about
| creating access to public networks," he said.
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http://enterpriselinuxlog.blogs.techtarget.com/2007/05/09/red-hat-summit-inspirational-keynote-you-are-here/
http://tinyurl.com/2pd4np
Talking security with Red Hat's Mark Cox
,----[ Quote ]
| "Aside from Web browser flaws there are not actually that many
| remote vulnerabilities these days for attackers to write exploits
| for. A default installation of Enterprise Linux 4 AS, for example,
| was vulnerable to only three critical security issues in its first
| two years."
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http://security.linux.com/article.pl?sid=07/05/04/1347221&from=rss
Yesterday:
How secure are Linux, Window and Mac OS?
,----[ Quote ]
| Overall it looks like the Linux kernel turns out to be the most
| secure system. Not only does it have virtually no security holes
| that lead to system access, it's also very resilient to remote
| attacks, two areas where both Windows and Mac OS X aren't doing
| very well.
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http://www.masuran.org/node/29
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