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Submission + - The Security Industry is Failing it's Customers (blogspot.com)

dremspider writes: An op-ed article stating that security industry is failing its customers overall and how the industry can overall get better. Increased spending on security hasn't been helping the industry as has been seen in light of larger security breaches. This article is promoting that instead of having individuals who are trained in information security the industry as a whole needs to shrink and instead the responsibility of security needs to be propagated throughout the organization. This means that instead of trying to train a few in information security,everyone must be trained and how it relates to their roles.

Comment My take on this... (Score 5, Insightful) 241

I have been in IT for about 10 years, so I am not sure I am completely qualified to say since forever, but I would say that the issue is we are now competing with cloud providers as to the expectation of our customers. For example, Gmail offers you 15 GBs for free and IT customers wonder why they only have 2GBs at work. Most cloud services have pretty amazing up times, and people wonder why your IT dept. can't do the same thing (no matter how well staffed it is). People are seeing the consuming of resources as free and then trying to IT accordingly.

Comment trust (Score 5, Insightful) 85

Most of these solutions require some sort of central authority to manage the security of all the routes. Sounds great until you realize that there is no one that all the users of the Internet can trust. I am not even sure that users can trust their own governments to manage this without exploiting users for the sake of surveillance let alone other countries trust one another. If you can't trust one another the best thing to do is remain insecure but watch each other like hawks for any foul play.

Comment Smart cards work (Score 2) 113

I have had a smart card setup for a little while. I use it for both OpenVPN and SSH access. I created the card by making my own CA and then using OpenSC to write to the card itself. There are some other cool things you can do like us it for PGP signing. I got a whole kit for about $100 bucks that came with a reader/writer, 2 cards and one USB thing. https://www.opensc-project.org...

Comment Re:Expensive Middle Class Sport Losing Patrons (Score 1) 405

BS... for one thing you can get into cycling paying from the $800 - $1200 range and get a pretty decent setup. Even if you spend more (in the $2-3000 dollar range) you can get a really nice set up. Of course if you wanted to buy a used bike then all these numbers would drop. If I bought cheap used clubs for $200 (not really fair because I am looking at crappy used clubs vs. a decent bike). The cost of entry would be lower, BUT you are forgetting one very important thing. I can use my bicycle as must as I want for free after that initial cost. Golfing costs me money every time I want to go play ranging from $8-10 to hit golf balls to $40+ to actually play at a real course. A well maintained bicycle will last at least 8 years even riding it pretty hard.

Bicycling
Fixed costs
$2000 for bike
$300 for clothes, shoes
Annual costs
$200 for maintenance (if you are able to do it on your own this would come down)
5 year total cost = $3300

Golf
Fixed costs:
$200 for used golf clubs just to go with your scenario
Annual Costs:
$750 for 15 rounds of golf at $50
$240 for 30 set of balls at a driving range $8
5 Year total cost : $5150
Keep in mind that with bicycling I can ride 3+ times a week. I would also argue that cycling is a better workout as well. Your crazy contrived situation is absurd. I am in a group with a number of people and all their bikes range from $600 to maybe $2000. Some of the bikes are well over 15 years old and none of us really care. The only reason you need to spend that much is if you are a) a professional or b) need to keep up with the Joneses.

Comment Any plans of getting a proper auditing daemon? (Score 1) 290

I know there is systrace, but that really isn't what I am looking for. Will there be plans to have a proper auditing daemon be able to monitor system calls in a log file? Being security centric, I would think this would be something high on the list. I know it puts a lot more load on the system and may be difficult for smaller systems, but auditd logs are considered good practice in Linux and FreeBSD. Any chance this will make it into OpenBSD at some point?

Comment Re:Wise (Score 1) 178

Oh ye wise and knowledgeable anonymous coward. Pray tell how would like them to store the key to verify the server on another system? If they break into your system as root who the heck cares that they can now masquerade as your system? They already have access to YOUR system so what more damage can they do by man in the middling you as well? Tell us what you would do to fix it and what benefit it would provide.

Comment Re:laser all the way (Score 1) 381

With my family it was the opposite. We printed so little that all our cartridges would dry up. The cartridges generally only last about a year assuming you don't use them up before that so we would print maybe 100 pages/year and then need to buy $70 worth of cartridges which comes to $.70 per page. An outrageous amount.
With toner I bought an all in one networked with a duplexer (black and white) for $150 and the starter cartridge will probably end up lasting us years therefore in a little over two years the printer will pay for itself. I can get refilled cartridges for about $30 that supposedly last 3K pages. Even if I buy the OEM cartridges that last 3K pages I will probably never have to buy a cartridge again at our current rate of printing before the printer breaks.

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