Not necessarily. Printers generally run unattended, printers generally are not 
rebooted periodically for updates (assuring malware can continue to run), 
printers generally are not updated even periodically, printers generally have 
almost no logging that could be reviewed, printers are generally "managed" by 
the Level 1 Help Desk types whose concern is 99.999% availability to the 
exclusion of everything else and a host of other things. 

IMHO there's not much comparison because of what they do, how they are 
(mis)managed and (not) monitored. But since vendors (and our employers) usually 
do their utmost to maximize profit while minimizing expense, nothing will 
change unless there is a user uproar. And that uproar for printers is generally 
a clamoring for more features, not less risk.
 
> And there you go putting stricter requirements on printers that you
> don't put on laptop, servers.  None of us would put any machines on
> the net if they had to meet your printer's requirements.

                                          

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