I would like to know where you buy the crack that you smoke.
If you're going to post histories of Unix/BSD, please be more
accurate.
jeff
On Sun, May 07, 2000 at 09:36:59AM -0400, Richard Noonan wrote:
> The "original" BSD project.
> http://www.freebsd.org/
>
> An off-shoot of FreeBSD which places security as a first priority.
> http://www.openbsd.org/
>
> A set of extensions to FreeBSD with a goal of meeting government
> security criteria (like B2).
> http://www.trustedbsd.org/
>
> The kernel these systems use has a built in packet filter just like
> linux. While the systems are entirely open, the code which actually
> goes into the distribution is from a group of developers much smaller
> than the linux development approach. Generally speaking this has
> resulted in fewer bugs. OpenBSD presently claims to have gone 2 years
> without a remote or local hole in the default install.
>
> Sorry, I don't follow SCO stuff at all.
>
> -Rich
>
> On Sun, 7 May 2000, Reynaldo Gumbao wrote:
>
> >
> > Just curious re: this BSD .You say it's a more secure OS.Anyone knows
> > what firewall's
> > run on BSD commercially.Can anyone point me to their website.
> > BTW have anyone heard of Cyberguard Firewall they say it runs on Unixware
> > 2.1 .They
> > said that they have bought the sourceCode from SCO.They say they ran their
> > Firewall
> > on top of the Unixware where they have re: do the OS of Unixware.And now
> > they
> > say they have the most secure firewall running on a most secured OS.
> > They're OS was rated as B2 level w/c no one was the're yet to be a B2
> > Level ?
> > Is this true?
> > Any comments from this?Please send me comments.
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