1 - 2 min read
Dec 13, 2000
BSD/OS is often considered a "secure" operating system. I often see ISPs and website hosting companies prominently brag that their servers are secure because they run BSDi's operating system. BSDi itself often promotes itself by saying it continues the BSD tradition . . .
BSD/OS is often considered a "secure" operating system. I often see ISPs and website hosting companies prominently brag that their servers are secure because they run BSDi's operating system. BSDi itself often promotes itself by saying it continues the BSD tradition of "extremely secure" systems. And for the past couple years as a BSD/OS administrator (running a variety of versions), I have found BSD/OS to be quite secure.
Even though my BSD/OS machines seemed secure and the patching mechanism (mods) worked great, BSD/OS is rarely covered in the normal security news -- maybe this is a good thing -- so I was always curious about BSDi's security stance.
To find out more about BSD/OS's past, current and future security plans, I spoke with Paul Anderson, the BSD/OS product manager. Anderson, who is based in Minneapolis, Minn., has been using BSD for about 19 years, starting with Unix systems programming as a freshman in college. His experience includes maintaining machines, developing device drivers and working with embedded systems for medical devices.
The link for this article located at BSD Today is no longer available.