On Mon, Jul 15, 2024 at 9:57 PM Tim via users
<users@lists.fedoraproject.org> wrote:
>
> Tim:
> >> I wonder if anyone vets that information?
>
> Jonathan Billings:
> > Just check the references:
> >
> > https://static.open-scap.org/ssg-guides/ssg-fedora-guide-standard.html#xccdf_org.ssgproject.content_rule_accounts_maximum_age_login_defs
>
> Although I picked a specific portion (about passwords), I meant overall
> if anyone vets all the advice.
>
> Just clicking on some of the reference links, I see many of them lead
> to pages which pop up a PR page for the organisation, and one which
> actually displays a "withdrawn NIST technical series publication" (in
> otherwise the reference is invalid).  I wasn't going to try them all,
> because (a) I don't have the time to put up with that crap, and (b)
> burying anything that might actually be useful in a mound of crap
> doesn't engender any faith in following their operating procedures.  It
> looks like it's designed to make you just give up and do what they say.
>
> The "rationale" rather lamely explains the idea behind the practice.
> Neither it, or any of the links I tried offer any proof that it was a
> good idea.  It doesn't give anything to back up the theory.  It doesn't
> address counterarguments.  It doesn't withstand my own scrutiny.
>
> It reminds me of something I looked up regarding some medical quackery
> device.  They proudly proclaimed its use in some hospital (singular) as
> proof that it had sound medical backing.  But if you followed up the
> recommendation, the hospital's paper said absolutely nothing about the
> medical benefits of the device, nor its ilk, it just mentioned that
> when staff handled those kinds of device that particular brand didn't
> break as easily as alternatives.  It was a false endorsement.
>
> I have a strong distrust of security advice like this, particularly
> when explanations are so obscure, and the advice doesn't even stand up
> to your own scrutiny.  I'm reminded of things like:  "9 out of 10
> doctors support out product."  They actually asked 100 doctors a
> question about it, most of them were negative or refused, but 9 gave a
> positive response.  So they just used 10 samples out of the 100 for
> their PR bullcrap.  It's not a lie, technically, but it's also a
> completely misrepresentation of the truth.

That's called an Appeal to Authority. On the password expiration item,
the authority was the DoD. It is a fallacious argument. They should
have appealed to a god, like Yahweh, Jesus or Allah. They would get
more blind followers.

Jeff
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