Linux chief: 'Open source is safer, and Linux is more secure than any other OS' (exclusive) | VentureBeat | Dev | by JOD
In an interview with Linux Foundation executive director Jim Zemlin, VentureBeat got a bird’s-eye view of the future of the open-source operating system for 2014.
We also addressed the controversial issues of government spying and “backdoors” — those nefarious windows into our personal online lives that the public recently discovered in most of the services we use every day.
Zemlin gave us the skinny on how and why GNU/Linux remains the most secure option for concerned consumers — and why it’s becoming the OS of choice for powering cars, phones, TVs, and all kinds of emerging devices.
Here’s our e-mail transcript in a bare-naked Q&A format.
VentureBeat: Security and privacy has been the hottest topic this year, bar none. We’ve heard rumors that Linus [Torvalds, Linux creator] OK’d a Linux backdoor for the government.
Zemlin: If there were a backdoor in Linux, you’d know it.
The whole world can see every line of code in Linux. This is one of the reasons Linux is more secure than other operating systems and why open-source software overall is a safer than closed software. The transparency of the code ensures it’s secure.
----
Do you know those things on your keyboard? The keys? I hate the ones on the bottom left!!! With a passion. The windows button and the ctrl buttons.
I had this whole thread typed in and ready to press the Submit button, but inadvertently hit some other button ctrl+windows+something and it just removed and deleted 20 minutes of typing.
Of course I went to the kitchen drawer and picked up a big knife and prised off all three GD buttons and threw them out the window!!!
Who need these hot keys anyway??##!!!
-----------------
I had said:
1. Privacy is not for old people like me to be too worried about. I do not have another 60 years, during which time I will be bothered about what I am doing on line today.
2. I am also not doing anything illegal, nor running top secret operations, which require privacy and security. So I don't care about secrecy anymore, like I used to 15 years ago.
But I have been watching opensource move forward since I first began reading about opensource in 1998, the year I got on the net with anything other than AOL crappola connections. And it has certainly been worth watching.
I was just wondering how secure you feel using your computers while you travel to various countries, including Thailand and China and those countries in East Asia?
Also, do you feel safer using the opensource based systems which you do, or not?
I always feel more comfortable, in almost every way, when I am using linux on my computer, not just because of security, or privacy, but also I don't have any crazy ad based or ad motivated software running that I did not install bugging me every second asking for something. It takes extra time to stop these multitude of extra programs from intruding and ruining my computer experience. Not to mention these GD keys I did not want to have on my keyboard, in the first place.
I also have made a linux based (Knoppix) encrypted USB bootable self-contained operating system and storage space on my 8 GM Transcend thumb drive. So if I want to be secure using any computer which is not mine, I can reboot with the USB and get on line, and do what I want, without touching the HD of the computer I am using, and also using any secure connections that I have set up previously on my USB bootable drive.
So what about you and security and OPENSOURCE while you are out of your home country and moving around the world? Or, don't you really care?


Reply With Quote

