malk315
Running Saws for Therapy
lol One thing is for sure, don't put anything on a Linux box you'd like to keep secure. The back door is embedded directly into the machine language of such systems. That's always the tradeoff for free software. It's called, "copyleft," in the trade and the joke is on you. Open source software is just that.
What you say has been debated for years. Many argue the opposite of what you say -- this article and many like it describe what I'm saying, point #5 in the article really sends home why it's really difficult to get malicious code into opensource:
http://www.pcworld.com/article/202452/why_linux_is_more_secure_than_windows.html
Realize that all of the source of a complete linux OS comes from pure source code -- in the case of embedded even the compiler that builds the source is typically first built as a cross compiler from it's source to create the target. In this case it makes what you say "back doors embedded into the machine language" impossible. Are you saying people who write malicious code write it only in the target's native assembly language? Your statement just makes no sense...
Irony to what you say also -- most firewalls and other security appliances run linux for it's superior ability at networking and security! Chances are if you are at home with a router fronting your internet connection it's running linux.
From the SANS internet storm center from only a few years ago:
"Here’s how poisonous the Internet environment is these days: According to the SANS Internet Storm Center, just connecting an unpatched Windows XP system to the Internet can result in a malware infection in an average time of four minutes."
I'm not here to start a war with whether linux is secure or not -- it can be argued both ways, but not due to "back doors being embedded into the machine language".
Sorry to de-rail the thread... Although it's got some good tech going but still not chainsaw related here...