Tzahi wrote:

> well, no argument about possible security holes. but there are many other
> ways to exploit ur clients on windows, so i don't consider it a big of a
> deal. if u want them to be secure, tell them to stop using windows. there
> isn't a windows on the planet that can't be hacked in.

Tzahi, please don't write this stuff - it doesn't make you sounds very
serious. First:
> there
> isn't a windows on the planet that can't be hacked in.

There are. Plenty of them. In fact, give me a Windows desktop installation
and I will configure it to be perfectly secure (at least as secure as any
Linux desktop installation). In particular, by minor tweaking to the default
installation you can create a Windows machine with no open ports; lets see
you 'hack into' that.

Second,
> well, no argument about possible security holes. but there are many other
> ways to exploit ur clients on windows, so i don't consider it a big of a
> deal.

A professional burglar can unlock your car door and disable your alarm in
less than 60 seconds. Do you leave your car door open at night? I assume you
don't.
Therefore, leaving a huge security hole in your network just because you
already have other holes is not a valid point when it comes to security
logic. In fact, it doesn't make sense in ANY kind of logic (except lazy
people's logic).

- Aviram



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