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posted by on Monday January 09 2017, @10:05AM   Printer-friendly
from the belt-and-[suspenders|braces] dept.

Red Hat employee Daniel J. Walsh writes via OpenSource.com

When I was young, Paul Simon released his hit song, 50 Ways to Leave Your Lover. Inspired by this song, I've collected 50 ways sysadmins and laypeople can avoid getting hacked:

"Make a new plan, Stan"
[...]
6. Run applications in the SELinux Sandbox whenever possible--it was a container before containers were cool. Also follow the development of Flatpack, which soon should be developing sandboxing capabilities.

7. Don't install or use Flash. Firefox no longer supports it, and hopefully most web servers are moving away from it.
[...]
"Just get yourself free"
[...]
19. [...] I don't do online banking on my phone--only on my Linux computer.
[...]
"Hop on the bus, Gus"

21. Run Linux on your systems. When I first hooked my father up with a computer system, I barely got home before his system was infested with viruses. I returned and installed Linux on his system and he has been running it ever since.
[...]
"And get yourself free"
[...]
50. Set up a special guest network for all those Christmas IoT devices your kids receive. I love my Amazon Echo and automated lights and power switches ("Alexa, turn on the Christmas Lights"), but each one of these is a Linux operating system [whose manufacturer's configuration] has questionable security.

Do you take exception with anything he suggests. (Being a Red Hat guy, he is enthusiastic about systemd.) Can you think of something he missed?


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  • (Score: 2) by driven on Monday January 09 2017, @05:19PM

    by driven (6295) on Monday January 09 2017, @05:19PM (#451519)

    I set up Windows for my kid with no A/V and it was infected with malware within 2 weeks. I got him a Mac with no anti-virus and it's been running with no issues for well over a year. The small part of me that still wants to use Windows is absolutely turned off by the invasive telemetry that Microsoft is sending itself from users' systems. It's a shame because Windows 10 seems fairly decent but the "price" is too high.
    My goal is to move my Mac laptops to Linux but I need to learn how to get the power management working perfectly first. I'd like to hear from anyone with experience on this.

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