Mandrake Secures French Ministry of Defense Deal 14
Sfing_ter writes "According to this press release, Mandrake Linux has won a contract to provide a secure linux solution for the French Ministry of Defense. Would this make the FMOD more secure than the USDOD?"
Please Move Along (Score:3, Insightful)
Insecure Linux (Score:1)
What makes Mandrake (that last distro I would use) able to be considered "Secure" and "Military Hardened"....
Interesting. Maybe they should consider OpenBSD instead.
Re:Insecure Linux (Score:2)
Re:Insecure Linux (Score:1)
Re:Insecure Linux (Score:1)
You don't seem to know what "security by obscurity" actually means. This page would be a useful read: http://omniknow.com/scripts/wiki.php?term=Security _by_obscurity [omniknow.com]
Security by obscurity relates a lot more closely to closed source software like windows than it does to Mandrake.
Re:Insecure Linux (Score:1)
Re:Insecure Linux (Score:4, Informative)
Here's a bunch of clues, anyway:
Anyway, if they manage a EAL5 certification for this, they'll be able to laugh their asses out at Defense Dept.s that use (or even more, mandate the use) of Windows on their computers. Seeing that w2k only made it (dubiously) to EAL4.
Vee avv leenoox Man'Drak. (Score:2)
Vee avv leenoox Man'Drak.
Fir houR lit skeels
(by the way I am french so beware, our Ministry of Defence is full of haxors (not much else, granted... but, c'est la vie!))
As far as I am concerned (living in Los Angeles) this is great news. Less money for the Evil Redmond Empire (ERE).
OpenBSD or Linux (Score:2)
Linux is having a very painful time being "desktop ready". BSD, particularly OpenBSD is a farther stretch to land on the desktops of the ministry of defense.
Seriously, if they want it for servers, firewalls, etc. Great. But Mandrake is a French company as well as linux is better suited to the desktop. Besides, Mandrake would interface flawlessly with a BSD box using NFS or your protocol/app of choice.
More secure? (Score:4, Interesting)
That is, after all, one of the primary reasons so many foreign government entities are getting interested in FOSS. Microsoft's response, Shared Source, is weak, since while they get to look at the source, they have no way to guarantee that it's the actual source for what they're installing (assuming that they even get to see all of the source. IIRC, they don't)
That Much? (Score:2)