[CentOS] what percent of time are there unpatched exploits against default config?

Thu Dec 29 15:35:02 UTC 2011
夜神 岩男 <supergiantpotato at yahoo.co.jp>

On 12/30/2011 12:00 AM, m.roth at 5-cent.us wrote:
> 夜神 岩男 wrote:
>> On 12/29/2011 10:21 PM, Marko Vojinovic wrote:
>>> On Thursday 29 December 2011 13:07:56 Reindl Harald wrote:
>>>> Am 29.12.2011 12:56, schrieb Leonard den Ottolander:
>>>>> On Thu, 2011-12-29 at 12:29 +0100, Reindl Harald wrote:
>>>>>> Am 29.12.2011 09:17, schrieb Bennett Haselton:
>>>>>>> Even though the ssh key is more
>>>>>>> random, they're both sufficiently random that it would take at least
>>>>>>> hundreds of years to get in by trial and error.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> if you really think your 12-chars password is as secure
>>>>>> as a ssh-key protcected with this password you should
>>>>>> consider to take some education in security
> <snip>
>>> It is very inconvenient for people who need to login to their servers
>>> from random remote locations (ie. people who travel a lot or work in
>>> hardware-controlled environment).
>>>
>>> Besides, it is essentially a question of overkill. If password is not
>>> good enough, you could argue that the key is also not good enough ---
>>> two keys (or a larger one) would be more secure. Where do you draw the
>>> line?
> <snip>
>> When traveling I log in to my home server and work servers with my
>> laptop. Its really a *lot* easier than using a bunch of pasword schemes.
> <snip>
> Ah, that brings to mind another issue with only passwords:
> synchronization. I worked as a subcontractor for a *huge* US co a few
> years ago. I've *never* had to write passwords down... but for there, I
> had a page of them! Our group's, the corporate test systems, the corporate
> *production* systems, and *each* had their own, along with their own
> password aging (there was *no* single sign-on), the contracting co's....
>
>         mark

Ah, forgot about that because its no longer a problem for me anymore. 
Using the same password on two systems is a religiously-to-be-observed 
rule that *most* users violate.

I can put my public keys on any system and not worry about it. Hitting 
the number pad for my digits is a lot faster than typing in a password, 
a lot more convenient than remembering a bunch of them (and a big 
motivator to buy laptops with full-blown 10-keys, which is common now 
anyway, as are internal card readers...).