Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 20th Mar 2009 13:51 UTC, submitted by google_ninja
Privacy, Security, Encryption Fresh from winning the PWN2OWN contest yesterday, Charlie Miller has been interviewed by ZDNet. He talks about how Mac OS X is a very simple operating system to exploit due to the lack of any form of anti-exploit features. He also explains that the underlying operating system is much more important in creating a successful exploit than the bowser, why Chrome is so hard to hack, and many other things.
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RE[2]: Comment by sadyc
by Soulbender on Fri 20th Mar 2009 15:39 UTC in reply to "RE: Comment by sadyc"
Soulbender
Member since:
2005-08-18

Allright, so by this logic if you find a fatal flaw in, say, a car from Ford the right and responsible thing to do (since Ford's designs arent "open source") would be to sit on it for an undetermined abount of time until you've find a way to trigger it. once you've done that you do NOT tell the public what the problem is but instead you try to "extort" money from Ford in exchange for not letting anyone know.
Yes, that's surely a society I'd love to live in.
Get this straight, it has NOTHING to do with if Apple's product is open or not, it's about the risk the consumers and the general public is exposed to.

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