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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: November 19th, 2023

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  • The problem is not the people who live far from decent public transport but those people who live in the city and uses it every day, on city, all roads are always for vehicles like cars and trucks, instead to be for pedestrian and for bikes. On bad connected places a car can make sense but most of the people in city have cars when they rarely go outside, they could rent a car and would be cheaper for them for those days they need to move away. About EV, I think we still have the same problem, but the waste it generates keeps on ground instead flying on air.



  • But I still think it’s wrong. Linux is the most used because it’s open source, anyone can audit it and adapt it to their servers or any infrastructure that can compute, as many libraries like OpenSSH and others that most closed source repositories are using to not re-make them from 0.


  • ⲇⲅⲇ@lemmy.mltoAsklemmy@lemmy.ml*Permanently Deleted*
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    10 months ago

    I didn’t ignore.

    those tend to be different attacks than would target random consumer computers

    That doesn’t mean attacks on Linux are minors, just different kind of attacks, because a user mistake is easier to exploit than a vulnerability in a software/code. That’s not about software mistakes that create vulnerabilities, that’s a user mistake that install malware.

    open source definitely plays a role in Linux security, but it’s minor compared to stuff like market share, user privilege, package management vs just installing random exes, different distros using different packaging systems

    This kind of attacks you are saying are actually the “minor” attacks that daily occurs, but normally the most effective, there is a lot of scam, but daily or hourly there are millions or billions of attacks everywhere, or that’s what my cybersecurity team at my company showed me, they are 24/7 there to never let any attack penetrate to the organization. Imperva and Cloudflare (for example) are or have powerful firewalls that block many attacks every minute. And you are comparing that to a malware that a user install.

    So that’s why I am saying, because you can’t see them, doesn’t mean there aren’t attacks.

    Edit: More data added on bottom.

    I found this: https://www.imperva.com/cyber-threat-index/

    The Cyber Threat Index is calculated using data gathered from all Imperva sensors across the world including over:

    • Over 25 monthly PBs (Peta Bytes1015) of network traffic passed through our CDN
    • 30 billions (109) of monthly Web application attacks, across 1 trillion (10¹²) of HTTP requests analyzed by our Web Application Firewall service (Cloud WAF)
    • Hundreds of monthly application and database vulnerabilities, as processed by our security intelligence aggregation from multiple sources