Comment: Re:Problem is the user, not the OS (Score 1) 554
I'll agree that certain distros are highly insecure, but equally there are hardened distros that will run essentially the same software. Obviously, software that violates security protocols won't run under a hardened distro (if the distro is any good, that is!) so it's not 100% the same. The lead between Windows and Linux should really be measured from "useful best to useful best" rather than "OTS to OTS" (since nobody runs OTS in practice, all systems are tweaked in some fashion) or "worst to worst" (since all OS' in their worst configuration have no security at all). I would dispute the idea that the best Windows configs are orders of magnitude closer to the best Linux configs, in their hardest configurations - GRSecurity + RBACS + Linux Capabilites + Netfilter + L7 Routing is still a very tough combination to beat in terms of the level of granularity of control. It certainly beats Windows' permissions families plus Windows' firewall in terms of what you can do and what you can restrict.
Agreed that Linux is not a magic security bullet. I wouldn't agree that no OS is unbreakable -- no -useful- OS is unbreakable, yes, but it's quite possible to make a useless OS that's unbreakable. Although, as Microsoft has found, it's also possible to make a useless OS that's very breakable indeed.