GNU, security, and RMS
James D. Allen
jamesa at arabian.Sun.COM
Sun Jun 4 13:47:58 AEST 1989
In article <2322 at thor.acc.stolaf.edu> mike at stolaf.edu (Mike Haertel) writes:
>
> (1) Anyone who thinks a UNIX-compatible system can be `secure' has
> some serious delusions. Timing windows and covert channels abound.
Help stamp out covert channels! I don't care what text-editor
my computer runs as long as KGB agents can't use it to send
messages to Moscow Central.
In article <29457 at ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU>, haynes at ucbarpa.Berkeley.EDU (Jim Haynes) writes:
> In article <2322 at thor.acc.stolaf.edu> mike at stolaf.edu writes:
> >
> >(2) There should not be security among the users of a computer system.
> > The principal use I have seen security put to has been the self-
> > aggrandizement of system administrators at the expense of the
> > user community. (I agree that in some situations it is reasonable
> > to have security to keep out outsiders, though.)
Bravo! I'll do an occasional
% chmod 600 Personal_little_black_book
to discourage casual snooping, but I always make /dev/mem and
/dev/disk `rw-r--r--'. If a user wants to write his own improved
`df' or `ps', more power to him.
>
> Well, you have a right to your opinion; but a corollary of this belief
> is that all the users of a computer system have to be mutually friendly
> and responsible and trust one another. Which sounds like the mythical
> home town where people don't need to lock the doors when they leave home.
Rare perhaps in 1990 U.S.A., but "mythical"? Boy. I guess one way to
cope with cynicism is to believe things are this bad everywhe{n,re}.
>
> I claim the right to remain highly skeptical when the user community is
> a collection of college students of widely varying backgrounds, political
> beliefs, sexual orientations, maturities, academic abilities, etc.
Oh, I was wondering how different organizations used the group_id.
Let me guess:
% cat /etc/group
fhetero:*:1:
mhetero:*:2:
fhomo:*:-2:
mhomo:*:-3:
boviphile:*:-4:
I suppose Berkeley invented setgroups() to accommodate bisexuals.
+ In article <3, I think> jfh at rpp386.cactus.org (John F. Haugh II) writes:
+ + I think [a previous poster] meant getting rid of UID == 0 being a
+ + privileged user. Again, this an Orange Book requirement.
Orange Book? Oh, you mean the people that brought us the B-1 Bomber
and the Iranian secret police. Right on! Let Noriega export billions
of $ of cocaine to North America, just don't tell him the root
password.
> --
> Mike Haertel <mike at stolaf.edu>
> ``There's nothing remarkable about it. All one has to do is hit the right
> keys at the right time and the instrument plays itself.'' -- J. S. Bach
So JS Bach was a Unix hacker! It wasn't mentioned in his biography.
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