Jeffrey Engle wrote: > Is virus software a must have? I'm trying Fedora 9, used Mac OS X for > years without it. What say you? Jeff There is a school of thought that says both traditional viruses and traditional anti-virus are becoming obsolete. Malware is changing, and traditional anti-virus is not keeping up. Desktop systems these days are most likely to be compromised either through bugs in browsers (or browser-related software such as flash, or conceivably an office suite, if the user can be enticed to open a Word document), or through users deliberately installing something that’s presented as (for example) a video codec. Very often, the user will be encouraged to visit a website hosting the malware through spam. The malware won't be in the spam, and traditional anti-virus techniques won’t spot anything. Anti-spam techniques *will* stop most spam, but no credible anti-spam technique claims to stop 100% of spam. In any case, the malware will be hosted on a computer that is controlled by the BadGuys. They get to choose which version of the malware they make available, and they can change it at a moment’s notice. By the time the anti-virus companies have got signatures out, the BadGuys can have changed the malware five times. The BadGuys are in league with serious criminals, and have serious amounts of resources. The anti-virus companies are losing this race. And malware is no longer aimed at the computer, or the OS. They’re after money – either through getting the computer to send spam, or steal credit card details, or extortion, or whatever. If malware can run as you, then they’ve got nearly everything they want. What does this mean for Fedora (and Mac OS)? Firstly, security updates are your main line of defence. They are as important as anti-virus ever was. Secondly, the BadGuys will get to know of security vulnerabilities fast, possibly before Fedora does. You can help protect yourself by limiting your exposure. SELinux won’t do you much good (yet), but something like NoScript (a Firefox add-on) which disables Javascript and Flash, except when you really want them, will mean that you will probably be running a lot less code should you visit a website controlled by the BadGuys, which means there will be less security bugs lurking. Thirdly, the scarcity of Mac and Linux installs aren’t helping as much as they used to. The BadGuys can detect what you’re running and launch an appropriate attack. They’re already doing this for Firefox and Internet Explorer on Windows. Most importantly, a thinking user is a *lot* less likely to get infected on any platform. If you wonder “why is this postcard site getting me to install this add-in?” then you might not install the malware. If you just click “OK” (or “Allow”) without even reading the associated messages, treating “OK” as the computer equivalent of “use a hammer on it”, then you’re much more likely to “OK” a virus install. Unfortunately, it’s still way too easy on Fedora to install third-party Firefox add-ins. James. -- E-mail: james@ | Blinking text seems awfully archaic and old-fashioned in aprilcottage.co.uk | these days of flash and javascript atrocities, but we had | to manage to get annoyed at the technology that was | available at the time; you youngsters won't understand. | -- http://lwn.net/Articles/140450 -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines