No, I don't think so. Qubes OS hasn't much relevance to home computing. But it could be useful in server environments to guard against zero day attacks.
Hi NormanF, Apparently, you missed the part about isolating the environment for banking from a home computer - of course, it has relevance! However, most folks today that do banking from their home computer foolishly think they are secure - on a Windows computer. You never know, when OSes begin to be built like Qubes with secure isolation in mind and the black hats concentrate enough on hardware related schemes - who's to say that there will Never be a blue pill for Qubes, eh? -- Tom
Banks are secured by SSL site. And most people do business on the Internet over a secured network. If you exercise due prudence, you shouldn't have to worry about online safety. Have a firewall and on Windows computers, have anti-virus and anti-malware software installed. I've never needed anything else and I've never had my computer invaded by a virus or a Trojan Horse.
Hi NormanF, What you don't know about is how many times banks have been compromised - i.e. they do not like to advertise that they have been breached - SSL and Windows - just like Swiss cheese, IOW full of holes since no Windows OS has ever been designed with security aforethought, except for Singularity which may never see the light of day. Wrt trojan horses - none that you know about, eh? My advice - we will all benefit from Qubes, so pay attention, it may just save all our b***s. -- Tom
this is very interesting thread worth checking thanks lotuseclat79 for sharing its feel like what we use in windows sandboxie a set of tight rules inside different sandboxes for every different propose yes i read the site and like their idea that its very hard or impossible to secure every thing on kernel mode even you did it give you trouble so its better to create different (xen vs kvm+ harden linux environments for web apps ) and environments (xen vs kvm+ linux environments for secure apps to run smoothly) even if one xen somehow comprise it blocked by Intel Trusted Execution Technology (TXT). http://www.intel.com/technology/malwarereduction/index.htm in worst case which i doubted if its is possible to dodge (TXT) that thing in real world but even if that happens still you are in virtual xen sorry i give above example of windows sandboxie with pre-set and tight rules to make it simple i know its kinda same yet very different in linux environment Qubes OS video on youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NeKMNc6SUNk http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8blWjjbhBOU this thing i always miss in linux although there is selinux sandbox but its much more than that and looks pretty simple to use awesome stuff thanks guys for sharing wonder the same question Is there a blue pill or red pill for Qubes OS?. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_Pill_(malware) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_pill#Other_uses
http://theinvisiblethings.blogspot.com/ http://www.qubes-os.org/Screenshots.html now my head is spinning like neo and i am taking headache pill
Hmm ive just read this im shocked that xorg allows all applictions to have full access rights regardless of user accounts. surely that makes any operating system using xorg really unsecure? do other display servers act the way way for example wayland? I like the idea of qubes but the minimum requirements are high and im sure it would require quite alot of learning. I dont think most people on here would need that sort of security. heck most of us could run any operating system without any form of security software and use a root /admin account all the time with no issues.
Qubes OS represents more or less the gold standard of security that M$ should have designed with security aforethought from the start of its Windows line of computer OSes. The sad truth is we all need the kind of security that Qubes OS represents - and if it were possible for "most of us could run any operating system without any form of security software and use a root /admin account all the time with no issues" - then no malware would exist - a pipe dream by any other name! -- Tom
Each "Qube" requires 400mb to run so is the reason for the high memory requirement. I think maybe 3 qubes are running minimum at startup. I only have 2gb so not sure if I would try it out. DDR3 is getting pretty cheap now though, so maybe upgrading isn't a bad idea.
TrustedDesktop is there is that free it look little familiar or may be i am totally wrong Babel Fish English translation from German link http://babelfish.yahoo.com/translat...t/pages/57064.htm&lp=de_en&btnTrUrl=Translate