> From: Wandered Inn [mailto:">esoteric@denali.atlnet.com]
> So it's the ISP's responsibility to train them? Does the car dealer
> teach you to drive?
And how long have cars been a part of the culture? When did they start
offering Network Security Education in the High Schools? I am pretty sure
that when cars first came out, car sellers did a *lot* more customer
hand-holding, just like IBM did in it's heyday. When network connectivity
becomes a commodity, and the culture has developed the infrastructure to
support it, then this argument would become a valid one, Until then...
> > I think that a class-action suit like this is exactly
> > what is needed to
> > get more awareness of this issue.
>
> Maybe, but I still think their suing the wrong folks. Car dealers are
> required to install seatbelts, airbags and brakes. Then again, these
> advancements only came along once a few folks were killed, so the same
> may well happen with computer network technologies.
Actually, these advancements only came along when activists sued car
manufacturers and congress legislated changes, people had been getting
killed for decades with no action on the part of the manufacturers.
If you actually *read* the original article, you'll see that the suit is
being brought against Pacific Bell for false advertising, because the DSL
company offered "secure, dedicated links to the Internet,". The guy wants
them to tell the truth. The CTO of another DSL company is quoted as saying
"The fact of the matter is, the vast majority of the population isn't
exposed. Why scare the guy who's just hooking up a Windows 95 computer?"
The security advice from PacBell? "If you're concerned about the security of
your Basic DSL connection, simply turn off your computer..."
DSL providers are worried about the bottom line, so security awareness
needs to have an affect on the bottom line. Car manufacturers were afraid
if they put safety features in their cars, no one would buy them. Once it
was mandated and consumers were given a chance to buy safety features, the
manufacturers got out *ahead* of the regulations, offering *more* than
mandated and consumers have a choice.
And has Mike has pointed out, it is all those clueless computers out there
that will be compromised and launch the next DDoS on *your* computers, or
invade the computers of the company you have all that stock in.
--
To unsubscribe: mail ">majordomo@ale.org with "unsubscribe ale" in message body.