On 07/09/2018 03:16 AM, KatolaZ wrote:
On Mon, Jul 09, 2018 at 02:50:56AM -0700, Jimmy Johnson wrote:
On 07/09/2018 01:53 AM, Jimmy Johnson wrote:
On 07/09/2018 01:06 AM, Andrew McGlashan wrote:
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA256



On 09/07/18 17:51, KatolaZ wrote:
Literally anybody can get the sources of the Linux kernel and read
through it. So I guess your fears are somehow unjustified...


Has the thought occurred to you that maybe the people that where finding
those problems are now working for the bad guys?  I remember way back in my
days with windows all the good people finding problems with windows where
soon bought up by microsoft, now they are buying up linux, do you really
want to give up?  Now I read even BSD is going to adopt systemd, it's
looking like the without-systemd project is the only hope to save linux and
keep it from becoming another microsoft project, I'm not willing to stop, I
will still hold a candle for freedom.


You can't buy everybody. Not even Intel, which is the largest actor in
IT, could silence the group which discovered Spectre and Meltdown,
despite the trick costed them billion dollars and despite they were
notified of the vulnerabilities several months before they were
disclosed to the wide public.

Conspiracy theories do not work for a simple reason: you just can't
buy everybody, and even if you think you can, people have always liked
to talk about their smart discoveries.

Almost everybody out there seems to be looking for their 5 minutes of
glory. Look for instance at all the clamour around the "fatal PGP
vulnerability", which was not a PGP vulnerability at all, rather the
manifestation of the sheer incompetence of almost all the developers
of MUAs in the last 20 years. The result of that "discovery" was a
totally wrong and misleading message: "Oh! Don't encrypt your emails
any more because it's DANGEROUS!!!". Which is just plain nonsense, and
tells a lot about how the media can disproportionately inflate even
the most silly news about the most silly bug.

You can fear only what you don't understand, and you can successfully
fight only what you understand fully. There are lots of people out
there who understand a lot more about the Linux kernel than many of us
here. I simply decided to trust them, collectively, because I know
that nobody can buy all of them.


Well some of those kernel experts are saying you need to check your kernel. Also how you respond to this thread speaks volumes.
--
Jimmy Johnson

Devuan Jessie - KDE 4.14.2 - AMD A8-7600 - EXT4 at sda2
Registered Linux User #380263

_______________________________________________
Dng mailing list
[email protected]
https://mailinglists.dyne.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/dng

Reply via email to