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[Linux-aus] tingilinde: monocultures
http://tingilinde.typepad.com/starstuff/2003/08/monocultures.html
This standardization has allowed for reductions in cost of
hardware, perhaps in software (although that is debatable) and
in training. Unfortunately it has turned our society into a
computational monoculture with many critical elements of
society - government, finance, police, fire, military,
transportation, healthcare, etc etc being made vulnerable to
the threats that monocultures face.
Even if operating systems and applications packages were
equally secure, the version that enjoys monopoly is inherently
more vulnerable - studies in the biological world indicate
that this vulnerability is non-linear -- a system that has 5%
market penetration is much safer than a simple ratio (95/5)
would suggest.
[...]
If you are a home user or small organization with only a few
computers, using something other than the dominant software
and OS will give you enormous protection. If you have more
machines and or a robustness requirement, you may wish to
consider a mix of operating systems (nothing that the safest
mix would exclude the dominant OS). Publicly held businesses
should be required to show how diverse their infrastructures
are (perhaps on their Form 10-Qs) and let investors decide
where their investments should be made.
This is not Microsoft bashing - if Linux or OS X were at the
number one position, the same would apply to them.
Cheers; Leon
--
http://cyberknights.com.au/ Modern tools; traditional dedication
http://plug.linux.org.au/ Committee Member, Perth Linux User Group
http://slpwa.asn.au/ Committee Member, Linux Professionals WA
http://linux.org.au/ Committee Member, Linux Australia