My wish list is, Automated updates that work, a beginning to serious user
education, improvements to user education at all Internet sites and finally no
more executable attachments in email :D.
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My wish list is, Automated updates that work, a beginning to serious user
education, improvements to user education at all Internet sites and finally no
more executable attachments in email :D.
1. Microsoft to actually follow through with there "new committment to security".
2. Yahoo and msn to try and combat their spamming problems
3. A secure wireless standard
4. A shiny new laptop
i only need one thing on my security wishlist.
1. The end of all DDoS attacks
1. A hardware firewall please santa.
:)
I know this is a pipe dream, but here goes. Everybody contain the laughter.
A truly secure server application. So clients don't call all the time. Saying "Our server is messed up" only to find it is because they did'nt update it, patch it, or left somthing open internaly or externaly.
I know this is impossible as long as MS dominates. But, getting clients to switch from MS is like pulling an elephant out of a gnats as$%$^%%$^%. LOL :D
my first would be to have Ms publicly recognize they don't give a &é"é about security...
the second secure self configuring networks with their MANAGEMENT tools ...
Open Source M$ O/S heheh and no more "unknown" errors!!!
LOLQuote:
Originally posted by s0nIc
Open Source M$ O/S heheh and no more "unknown" errors!!!
Would this be a good way to secure M$ ? :D .
I'll think of more later...
A cheap hard drive (suitable for home use, at least) with an external faceplate with a little "Read only/Normal" switch on it. If you want to see what that weird attachment does, just flip the switch, and it becomes *physically* impossible for the drive to write data to itself. I can see so many applications of this. Much more convenient than running a webserver off a CD drive too, because changes don't involve re-burning everything.
I've fallen in love with the idea :D Totally unwritable drives, unless the crackers manage to write software to emit radio waves that reprogram the hardware circuits of the drive.
(If the drive already exists, let me know!)