Should you always use the "admin" account with Win7?

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XanaduTheBand

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#1 XanaduTheBand
Member since 2005 • 2971 Posts

This may be a stupid question but when I had Vista I used to have the admin account that I would only do major installations with. For almost all other daily use, I would have a different user account. Do I need to do this with Windows 7 (or is it a good idea?)?

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Tezcatlipoca666

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#2 Tezcatlipoca666
Member since 2006 • 7241 Posts

It is a good security precaution although most people don't care and use admin all the time. If you think that it is worth it then go ahead imo. If not you aren't really at a great risk or anything.

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ionusX

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#3 ionusX
Member since 2009 • 25778 Posts

This may be a stupid question but when I had Vista I used to have the admin account that I would only do major installations with. For almost all other daily use, I would have a different user account. Do I need to do this with Windows 7 (or is it a good idea?)?

XanaduTheBand

i recommend making a second account and using it that way but really from your point of view its probably fine to use the admin.. i mean i used the hidden user account settings to eliminate the admin as a bootable option (unless in safe mode) but thats simply to avoid any unpleasentness.

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Firebird-5

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#4 Firebird-5
Member since 2007 • 2848 Posts

no, you shouldn't - that's one of the main security advantages that linux and osx have over windows is that people don't actually use admin accounts

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Iantheone

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#5 Iantheone
Member since 2007 • 8242 Posts

[QUOTE="XanaduTheBand"]

This may be a stupid question but when I had Vista I used to have the admin account that I would only do major installations with. For almost all other daily use, I would have a different user account. Do I need to do this with Windows 7 (or is it a good idea?)?

ionusX

i recommend making a second account and using it that way but really from your point of view its probably fine to use the admin.. i mean i used the hidden user account settings to eliminate the admin as a bootable option (unless in safe mode) but thats simply to avoid any unpleasentness.

Yeah, this is probably the best way to go about it. I use the Admin account as my main one and haven't run into any problems, but I still wouldn't recommend it.
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KLONE360

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#6 KLONE360
Member since 2007 • 1119 Posts
If you only use admin powers once in a while and dont actually do anything but browse the web and stuff than its probably fine. If you actually use your computer than just use admin, dousnt really matter unless you suck with computers and change stuff you shouldn't. I just use admin because I like the Powah. The advantage in Linux, ubuntu at least is all you need to do really to get admin powers for just one thing is do sudo and type in a password, or just PW if your using the GUI. Some will say different, but in my experience is any Malware or malcontents do get in I hardly think windows is going to stop them from getting admin powers when it shouldnt have let them in in the first place.
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freesafety13

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#7 freesafety13
Member since 2008 • 823 Posts

no, you shouldn't - that's one of the main security advantages that linux and osx have over windows is that people don't actually use admin accounts

Firebird-5
No, the biggest advantage that Linux and OSX have over Windows is that both were built using Unix kernals and have been hardened since day one. I would love to see a tally of Windows users that only have/use a Windows PC because they game. If it wasn't for gaming, my pc would be pure Debian through and through.
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Kinthalis

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#8 Kinthalis
Member since 2002 • 5503 Posts

Lol, you're kidding right?

The amound of enterprise development on Windows, the ton of windows software and tools, the flexibility and openes of the OS, that's why I use windows, not just 'cause of games.

Modern windows OS's are very well secured. In fact, the windows OS is usually more secure than Apple's OS - as OSX usually has more serious vulnerabilities.

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JohnF111

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#9 JohnF111
Member since 2010 • 14190 Posts

Its not good practise but these days i don't think anyone cares, i know i shouldnt do it but i do anyway, i know i shouldn't have tonnes of trash on my dekstop when using roaming profiles but i do it anyway. Up to you if you're going to be attacked then the hack/virus will most likely use an exploit in the OS and being in a limited account probably won't stop it.

On topic, Windows 7 does need admin rights to install most things that make changes to registry or system files so yes, things like windows update will need admin rights.

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freesafety13

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#10 freesafety13
Member since 2008 • 823 Posts

Lol, you're kidding right?

The amound of enterprise development on Windows, the ton of windows software and tools, the flexibility and openes of the OS, that's why I use windows, not just 'cause of games.

Modern windows OS's are very well secured. In fact, the windows OS is usually more secure than Apple's OS - as OSX usually has more serious vulnerabilities.

Kinthalis
What??? The openes of the OS is a primary reason why you use Windows. You do realize that every time you get a security update notification from Microsoft, its because another vulnerability has been discovered in the Windows NT kernal. Very, Very, Very rarely are there security updates released for vulnerabilities in the Linux Kernal, thats because they are extremely rare. And who gives a sh.. about OSX, except wanna be tweeners that dance in Apple stores like Britney Spears while dressing like Justin Bieber? Also, please provide me one tool that you run on Windows on a day to day basis that cant be found for Linux?
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JohnF111

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#11 JohnF111
Member since 2010 • 14190 Posts

Lol, you're kidding right?

The amound of enterprise development on Windows, the ton of windows software and tools, the flexibility and openes of the OS, that's why I use windows, not just 'cause of games.

Modern windows OS's are very well secured. In fact, the windows OS is usually more secure than Apple's OS - as OSX usually has more serious vulnerabilities.

Kinthalis
This is correct, hackers and virus makers are resorting to having to heavily invest in their attempts now on windows as Windows has been soooo hardened that only the best of hackers can find flaws in the actual OS, how the OS is setup is another story though and because linux is their main OS they aren't going to excrete a brown mess all over their own desktop which in effect means linux and OSX are a hell of a lot more vulnerable than Windows it's just no one bothers with them much.
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Tezcatlipoca666

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#12 Tezcatlipoca666
Member since 2006 • 7241 Posts

In the end the user is usually the greatest vulnerability. No OS can protect itself against ignorant people succumbing to social engineering ploys.

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Tezcatlipoca666

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#13 Tezcatlipoca666
Member since 2006 • 7241 Posts

which in effect means linux and OSX are a hell of a lot more vulnerable than Windows it's just no one bothers with them much.JohnF111

Do you have any evidence that Linux is a lot more vulnerable than Windows?

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JohnF111

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#14 JohnF111
Member since 2010 • 14190 Posts

[QUOTE="JohnF111"] which in effect means linux and OSX are a hell of a lot more vulnerable than Windows it's just no one bothers with them much.Tezcatlipoca666

Do you have any evidence that Linux is a lot more vulnerable than Windows?

Nope not a sausage, i have a lot of evidence to show that Windows has become pretty fortified and that Linux hasn't had nearly as many patches or investment in security. So which would you prefer, a platform thats been hacked and attacked since day one and given a million patches, or one that no one really bothers to patch much because it's not a target..Example:

Sony didn't patch their servers because "they weren't a target of attack" - Yet they were extremely vulnerable when someone DID attack which showed that just because they hadn't been badly attacked doesn't mean you are completely secure(can be directly applied to an OS).

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XanaduTheBand

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#15 XanaduTheBand
Member since 2005 • 2971 Posts

[QUOTE="JohnF111"] which in effect means linux and OSX are a hell of a lot more vulnerable than Windows it's just no one bothers with them much.Tezcatlipoca666

Do you have any evidence that Linux is a lot more vulnerable than Windows?

This link shows how "easy" it is to compromise a system.Yes, I know this is a web browser, however, it makes the point that with resources and tenacity, anyone is vunerable. The "godlike" powers of Linux are no match for a talented hackers determination. The Nuclear programs in Iran (Linux systems) were made foolish by hackers. Our goverment is hacked no matter what OS they are using. The point is arguing over superiority is pointless as it is almost impossible to accurately measure. It's like arguing which leaky ship is sinking the slowest. Also, as someone pointed out earlier, there is an element of "let's attack the biggest target" going on here. Let's say you are write code to create a botnet. Who do you target? 300 million users on XP service pack 1,20 million people on OSX, or 5 million people running a linux distro. Seems like a no brainer to me.

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Tezcatlipoca666

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#16 Tezcatlipoca666
Member since 2006 • 7241 Posts

[QUOTE="Tezcatlipoca666"]

[QUOTE="JohnF111"] which in effect means linux and OSX are a hell of a lot more vulnerable than Windows it's just no one bothers with them much.JohnF111

Do you have any evidence that Linux is a lot more vulnerable than Windows?

Nope not a sausage, i have a lot of evidence to show that Windows has become pretty fortified and that Linux hasn't had nearly as many patches or investment in security. So which would you prefer, a platform thats been hacked and attacked since day one and given a million patches, or one that no one really bothers to patch much because it's not a target.. Exmaple: Sony didn't patch their servers because "they weren't a target of attack" - Yet they were extremely vulnerable when someone DID attack.

Linux has a fairly large market share in the server/mainframe world. It goes without saying that it has been targeted by hackers and it is patched quite regularly as a result. Nobody would rely on it for running their servers if it was substantially less secure than Windows...

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Tezcatlipoca666

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#17 Tezcatlipoca666
Member since 2006 • 7241 Posts

[QUOTE="Tezcatlipoca666"]

[QUOTE="JohnF111"] which in effect means linux and OSX are a hell of a lot more vulnerable than Windows it's just no one bothers with them much.XanaduTheBand

Do you have any evidence that Linux is a lot more vulnerable than Windows?

This link shows how "easy" it is to compromise a system.Yes, I know this is a web browser, however, it makes the point that with resources and tenacity, anyone is vunerable. The "godlike" powers of Linux are no match for a talented hackers determination. The Nuclear programs in Iran (Linux systems) were made foolish by hackers. Our goverment is hacked no matter what OS they are using. The point is arguing over superiority is pointless as it is almost impossible to accurately measure. It's like arguing which leaky ship is sinking the slowest. Also, as pointed out earlier. Let's say you are write code to create a botnet. Who do you target? 300 million users on XP service pack 1,20 million people on OSX, or 5 million people running a linux distro. Seems like a no brainer to me.

I completely agree with all your points. I'm not trying to claim that any OS is superior to another. I just think that the claim that Windows is substantially more secure than Linux is far-fetched.

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JohnF111

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#18 JohnF111
Member since 2010 • 14190 Posts

[QUOTE="JohnF111"][QUOTE="Tezcatlipoca666"]

Do you have any evidence that Linux is a lot more vulnerable than Windows?

Tezcatlipoca666

Nope not a sausage, i have a lot of evidence to show that Windows has become pretty fortified and that Linux hasn't had nearly as many patches or investment in security. So which would you prefer, a platform thats been hacked and attacked since day one and given a million patches, or one that no one really bothers to patch much because it's not a target.. Exmaple: Sony didn't patch their servers because "they weren't a target of attack" - Yet they were extremely vulnerable when someone DID attack.

Linux has a fairly large market share in the server/mainframe world. It goes without saying that it has been targeted by hackers and it is patched quite regularly as a result. Nobody would rely on it for running their servers if it was substantially less secure than Windows...

Oh so it gets patched quite a lot you say? So its got vulnerabilities that have to be patched and patched? There's your answer, they're about as secure as each other. Also a lot of places uses linux purely because it's free or very cheap compared to Windows. Oh and incase i maybe gave you the wrong end of the stick i don't approve of the "windows is better" claims either, i have a dualboot using Grub it's just the terms security is pretty loose, Linux is secure because no one really wants to damage it, and windows is secure because it's patched like crazy every month.

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freesafety13

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#19 freesafety13
Member since 2008 • 823 Posts

[QUOTE="Tezcatlipoca666"]

[QUOTE="JohnF111"] which in effect means linux and OSX are a hell of a lot more vulnerable than Windows it's just no one bothers with them much.JohnF111

Do you have any evidence that Linux is a lot more vulnerable than Windows?

Nope not a sausage, i have a lot of evidence to show that Windows has become pretty fortified and that Linux hasn't had nearly as many patches or investment in security. So which would you prefer, a platform thats been hacked and attacked since day one and given a million patches, or one that no one really bothers to patch much because it's not a target..Example:

Sony didn't patch their servers because "they weren't a target of attack" - Yet they were extremely vulnerable when someone DID attack which showed that just because they hadn't been badly attacked doesn't mean you are completely secure(can be directly applied to an OS).

You have no idea what you're talking about do you? Yes, Sony was attacked, but more significantly, Sonys SQL database was attacked. Their vulnerability wasn't "extreme" as you claim, but instead their vulnerability was targeted and exploited by a very coordinated attack. Quite honestly, human error played a tremendous role in Sony being exploited to the extent that it was. If only 1 person in the 4 months port scans were being performed on their network would have check their intrusion prevention devices logs, their exploitation would have been prevented.

And like I said earlier, Linux does not release security updates to their Kernal very often because those exploitation's have been resolved in previously releases of those Kernals. When Linux releases a new Kernal, it is the equivalence of Windows releasing a new OS. Its like going from XP to Vista and I assure you new Linux Kernals release much more frequently than Window's OS''s. You do realize that the very board you are typing on, a PHP board, is running on an Apache server. Well guess what, that Apache server is running on a Linux machine.

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XanaduTheBand

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#20 XanaduTheBand
Member since 2005 • 2971 Posts

[QUOTE="XanaduTheBand"]

[QUOTE="Tezcatlipoca666"]

Do you have any evidence that Linux is a lot more vulnerable than Windows?

Tezcatlipoca666

This link shows how "easy" it is to compromise a system.Yes, I know this is a web browser, however, it makes the point that with resources and tenacity, anyone is vunerable. The "godlike" powers of Linux are no match for a talented hackers determination. The Nuclear programs in Iran (Linux systems) were made foolish by hackers. Our goverment is hacked no matter what OS they are using. The point is arguing over superiority is pointless as it is almost impossible to accurately measure. It's like arguing which leaky ship is sinking the slowest. Also, as pointed out earlier. Let's say you are write code to create a botnet. Who do you target? 300 million users on XP service pack 1,20 million people on OSX, or 5 million people running a linux distro. Seems like a no brainer to me.

I completely agree with all your points. I'm not trying to claim that any OS is superior to another. I just think that the claim that Windows is substantially more secure than Linux is far fetched.

I agree. It seems to me that a complete re-write of software as we know it needs to occur that addresses fundamental flaws in the way software is made. I'm no computer expert, but the disruptiveness of butt-head individuals (not just ones that want money, but also those who do it for the lulz) is gonna get worse and worse.
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Tezcatlipoca666

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#21 Tezcatlipoca666
Member since 2006 • 7241 Posts

[QUOTE="Tezcatlipoca666"]

[QUOTE="JohnF111"] Nope not a sausage, i have a lot of evidence to show that Windows has become pretty fortified and that Linux hasn't had nearly as many patches or investment in security. So which would you prefer, a platform thats been hacked and attacked since day one and given a million patches, or one that no one really bothers to patch much because it's not a target.. Exmaple: Sony didn't patch their servers because "they weren't a target of attack" - Yet they were extremely vulnerable when someone DID attack.JohnF111

Linux has a fairly large market share in the server/mainframe world. It goes without saying that it has been targeted by hackers and it is patched quite regularly as a result. Nobody would rely on it for running their servers if it was substantially less secure than Windows...

Oh so it gets patched quite a lot you say? So its got vulnerabilities that have to be patched and patched? There's your answer, they're about as secure as each other. Also a lot of places uses linux purely because it's free or very cheap compared to Windows.

That's hardly the only reason to use Linux. I have a feeling that you don't know much about this OS and should refrain from making baseless claims about it.

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JohnF111

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#22 JohnF111
Member since 2010 • 14190 Posts

[QUOTE="JohnF111"]

[QUOTE="Tezcatlipoca666"]

Do you have any evidence that Linux is a lot more vulnerable than Windows?

freesafety13

Nope not a sausage, i have a lot of evidence to show that Windows has become pretty fortified and that Linux hasn't had nearly as many patches or investment in security. So which would you prefer, a platform thats been hacked and attacked since day one and given a million patches, or one that no one really bothers to patch much because it's not a target..Example:

Sony didn't patch their servers because "they weren't a target of attack" - Yet they were extremely vulnerable when someone DID attack which showed that just because they hadn't been badly attacked doesn't mean you are completely secure(can be directly applied to an OS).

You have no idea what you're talking about do you? Yes, Sony was attacked, but more significantly, Sonys SQL database was attacked. Their vulnerability wasn't "extreme" as you claim, but instead their vulnerability was targeted and exploited by a very coordinated attack. Quite honestly, human error played a tremendous role in Sony being exploited to the extent that it was. If only 1 person in the 4 months port scans were being performed on their network would have check their intrusion prevention devices logs, their exploitation would have been prevented.

And like I said earlier, Linux does not release security updates to their Kernal very often because those exploitation's have been resolved in previously releases of those Kernals. When Linux releases a new Kernal, it is the equivalence of Windows releasing a new OS. Its like going from XP to Vista and I assure you new Linux Kernals release much more frequently than Window's OS''s. You do realize that the very board you are typing on, a PHP board, is running on an Apache server. Well guess what, that Apache server is running on a Linux machine.

I was actually painting a bigger picture, instead of digging deep look at the whole picture, Sony gave a free service(linux) and it's fairly safe from harm so why should anyone put in lots of time or funds trying to patch things that no one will attack? But when someone did hit them(could be hacker, virus, back door) there are quite a lot of areas to do this because they didn't invest in security as much since Sony admins had a mindset of "Oh it's ok just use weak encryption not like anyone will take the data anyway.". Combine these points and it shows that if Linux had as much investment in security then i bet the community would be throwing us way more patches than they are currently and about as much as Windows gets each month.

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freesafety13

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#23 freesafety13
Member since 2008 • 823 Posts

[QUOTE="freesafety13"][QUOTE="JohnF111"] Nope not a sausage, i have a lot of evidence to show that Windows has become pretty fortified and that Linux hasn't had nearly as many patches or investment in security. So which would you prefer, a platform thats been hacked and attacked since day one and given a million patches, or one that no one really bothers to patch much because it's not a target..Example:

Sony didn't patch their servers because "they weren't a target of attack" - Yet they were extremely vulnerable when someone DID attack which showed that just because they hadn't been badly attacked doesn't mean you are completely secure(can be directly applied to an OS).

JohnF111

You have no idea what you're talking about do you? Yes, Sony was attacked, but more significantly, Sonys SQL database was attacked. Their vulnerability wasn't "extreme" as you claim, but instead their vulnerability was targeted and exploited by a very coordinated attack. Quite honestly, human error played a tremendous role in Sony being exploited to the extent that it was. If only 1 person in the 4 months port scans were being performed on their network would have check their intrusion prevention devices logs, their exploitation would have been prevented.

And like I said earlier, Linux does not release security updates to their Kernal very often because those exploitation's have been resolved in previously releases of those Kernals. When Linux releases a new Kernal, it is the equivalence of Windows releasing a new OS. Its like going from XP to Vista and I assure you new Linux Kernals release much more frequently than Window's OS''s. You do realize that the very board you are typing on, a PHP board, is running on an Apache server. Well guess what, that Apache server is running on a Linux machine.

I was actually painting a bigger picture, instead of digging deep look at the whole picture, Sony gave a free service(linux) and it's fairly safe from harm so why should anyone put in lots of time or funds trying to patch things that no one will attack? But when someone did hit them(could be hacker, virus, back door) there are quite a lot of areas to do this because they didn't invest in security as much since Sony admins had a mindset of "Oh it's ok just use weak encryption not like anyone will take the data anyway.". Combine these points and it shows that if Linux had as much investment in security then i bet the community would be throwing us way more patches than they are currently and about as much as Windows gets each month.

Please stop posting, you sound like a fool. Please first understand what a SQL database is and how it functions before you comment further in regards to Sony. So many things you say are just wrong. Sony didn't use Encryption, they used hashing. The attack on Sony had NOTHING to do with security vulnerabilities with Linux, Windows, OSX, MySQL, Solaris, IOS, or any other version of OS/Software/Firmware they are running on their network. It was a coordinated, targeted attack that could have been prevented but was not due to human error. The greatest vulnerability!!!!!
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Firebird-5

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#24 Firebird-5
Member since 2007 • 2848 Posts

[QUOTE="Firebird-5"]

no, you shouldn't - that's one of the main security advantages that linux and osx have over windows is that people don't actually use admin accounts

freesafety13

No, the biggest advantage that Linux and OSX have over Windows is that both were built using Unix kernals and have been hardened since day one. I would love to see a tally of Windows users that only have/use a Windows PC because they game. If it wasn't for gaming, my pc would be pure Debian through and through.

get off your high horse and read my post next time

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JohnF111

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#25 JohnF111
Member since 2010 • 14190 Posts
[QUOTE="JohnF111"]

[QUOTE="freesafety13"] You have no idea what you're talking about do you? Yes, Sony was attacked, but more significantly, Sonys SQL database was attacked. Their vulnerability wasn't "extreme" as you claim, but instead their vulnerability was targeted and exploited by a very coordinated attack. Quite honestly, human error played a tremendous role in Sony being exploited to the extent that it was. If only 1 person in the 4 months port scans were being performed on their network would have check their intrusion prevention devices logs, their exploitation would have been prevented.

And like I said earlier, Linux does not release security updates to their Kernal very often because those exploitation's have been resolved in previously releases of those Kernals. When Linux releases a new Kernal, it is the equivalence of Windows releasing a new OS. Its like going from XP to Vista and I assure you new Linux Kernals release much more frequently than Window's OS''s. You do realize that the very board you are typing on, a PHP board, is running on an Apache server. Well guess what, that Apache server is running on a Linux machine.

freesafety13

I was actually painting a bigger picture, instead of digging deep look at the whole picture, Sony gave a free service(linux) and it's fairly safe from harm so why should anyone put in lots of time or funds trying to patch things that no one will attack? But when someone did hit them(could be hacker, virus, back door) there are quite a lot of areas to do this because they didn't invest in security as much since Sony admins had a mindset of "Oh it's ok just use weak encryption not like anyone will take the data anyway.". Combine these points and it shows that if Linux had as much investment in security then i bet the community would be throwing us way more patches than they are currently and about as much as Windows gets each month.

Please stop posting, you sound like a fool. Please first understand what a SQL database is and how it functions before you comment further in regards to Sony. So many things you say are just wrong. Sony didn't use Encryption, they used hashing. The attack on Sony had NOTHING to do with security vulnerabilities with Linux, Windows, OSX, MySQL, Solaris, IOS, or any other version of OS/Software/Firmware they are running on their network. It was a coordinated, targeted attack that could have been prevented but was not due to human error. The greatest vulnerability!!!!!

Yeah you're probably right maybe i shouldn't try and compare a Sony service to an OS... Its rather difficult to explain how i'm trying to compare it so i just won't. Although i do know it had nothing to do with SQL or the security of linux itself, i was commenting purely on the services provided by linux and Sony as being free, not the actual hack/exploitation itself and that because its free and very useful it makes them both much less of a target.
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freesafety13

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#26 freesafety13
Member since 2008 • 823 Posts

[QUOTE="freesafety13"][QUOTE="Firebird-5"]

no, you shouldn't - that's one of the main security advantages that linux and osx have over windows is that people don't actually use admin accounts

Firebird-5

No, the biggest advantage that Linux and OSX have over Windows is that both were built using Unix kernals and have been hardened since day one. I would love to see a tally of Windows users that only have/use a Windows PC because they game. If it wasn't for gaming, my pc would be pure Debian through and through.

get off your high horse and read my post next time

I read your post, now whats your point? Do you really think whether your using an Admin(Root) account has much impact over the vulnerability of your system? For viruses, yes, for Intrusion Prevention, no. And the best defense against a Virus will always be Common Sense.
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#27 Firebird-5
Member since 2007 • 2848 Posts

[QUOTE="Firebird-5"]

[QUOTE="freesafety13"] No, the biggest advantage that Linux and OSX have over Windows is that both were built using Unix kernals and have been hardened since day one. I would love to see a tally of Windows users that only have/use a Windows PC because they game. If it wasn't for gaming, my pc would be pure Debian through and through.freesafety13

get off your high horse and read my post next time

I read your post, now whats your point? Do you really think whether your using an Admin(Root) account has much impact over the vulnerability of your system? For viruses, yes, for Intrusion Prevention, no. And the best defense against a Virus will always be Common Sense.

you may have read my post but it will take a long time for you to understand it apparently. it's nice to see you still haven't lost the self-important, holier-than-thou tone.

I was merely making an observation, due to the topic of the thread, that one shouldn't use the admin account (circumstances allowing), and this is one of the main security advantages that linux and osx have over windows. The overwhelming majority of viruses, exploits, trojans, or otherwise in windows result from administrator rights.

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edinsftw

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#28 edinsftw
Member since 2009 • 4243 Posts

Well, i use admin all the time, because so many of my applications ask for admin aproval, it is safer to not use admin...but im lazy.

Also, I do believe OS would be categorized under software, so its quite humerous that a heated discussion is in the hardware discusion board.

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freesafety13

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#29 freesafety13
Member since 2008 • 823 Posts

[QUOTE="freesafety13"][QUOTE="Firebird-5"]

get off your high horse and read my post next time

Firebird-5

I read your post, now whats your point? Do you really think whether your using an Admin(Root) account has much impact over the vulnerability of your system? For viruses, yes, for Intrusion Prevention, no. And the best defense against a Virus will always be Common Sense.

you may have read my post but it will take a long time for you to understand it apparently. it's nice to see you still haven't lost the self-important, holier-than-thou tone.

I was merely making an observation, due to the topic of the thread, that one shouldn't use the admin account (circumstances allowing), and this is one of the main security advantages that linux and osx have over windows. The overwhelming majority of viruses, exploits, trojans, or otherwise in windows result from administrator rights.

You have never used Linux before have you? Well, just so you know, you can invoke Root privileges in any flavor of Linux through a shell. So, guess what, if you dont assign a unique password, it wont matter whether your signed on as a Admin/Root user in Linux. How is this an advantage? Forget it, you cant enlighten those who refuse to see the light And, btw, I'm typing this on a Windows PC as an Admin and I've been using Admin privileges in Windows since 2002 without ever having any problems.