On Fri, 21 Apr 2000, Dan Newcombe wrote:
> I just bought a house, and I was not warned that if I left the door open
> that someone could come in and take things. Perhaps I should sue my
> builder? Or the mortgage company - they definatly have more money :)
The opennes of a computer is not obvious to the uninformed like the
openness of a front door is. You can't see the openness of a computer;
it is not tangible.
It seems like there has been a flipflop on mindset, though. Years ago,
when I mentioned using a modem to get onto the internet, people frequently
asked me if my machine could get hacked. The answer was no. Why?
Nothing to hack. The connection was done via a terminal emulator. Sure,
I could download malicious code, but for the most part, I couldn't be
specifically targetted.
> Same exact scenario though - even if I dialed into Mindspring, I am open
> if I'm an idiot.
True, however, you would tend to notice if your bandwidth was being sucked
down. A modem-speed connection doesn't provide sufficient utility in
executing a DoS attack, nor does it lend itself to easily downloading
contents of the machine. All of these things would require too much
bandwidth to execute in a worthwhile fashion over a modem.
> I always said that jocks and computers don't mix - not it's jocks, laywers
> and computers.
Lawyers don't mix, period. They are like a cancer, getting into things
and destroying and ruining them for others. What ever happened to
individual responsibility?
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