Driving into the lab this morning, I listened to an installment of
Radio Free Security, from WatchGuard Technologies.
I'm an episode behind. This one,
Radio Free Security unveils the Tip-O-Matic 650,
is well-produced and
full of solid technical security information, as are all of the
podcasts I have heard. It reminded me that
I Hate Network- and Computer-Security
Let me be clear. This is no fault of the Radio Free Security podcast, which is superb. Some of the topics they touched on—while important—have been said over and over, year after year. A few of the tips from the
Tip-O-Matic 650 (hey, guys, is that trademarked?):
-
Sometimes you should use reduced user rights
-
Egress filtering is a good thing
-
You should have a log strategy
In particular, these topics are examples of my reason #2, we
talk about
The same old stuff.
Now I am not saying that these things are not worth repeating. They are.
(See my previous comment to WatchGuard Scott Pinzon's comment
here.) I'm just tired of saying them.
I said them
here, and (in a column for WatchGuard)
here,
and in a paper I wrote for WatchGuard
here. Also, I—and many, many others—
have talked about these things, and continue to talk about them, in courses, talks, etc.
Having said that, I must remind you that I said just a few paragraphs
ago, this podcast is "well produced and
full of solid technical security information." And even though I've heard this particular stuff before, I enjoyed the podcast and will stay subscribed. Even
if just for the installments of
"IT Fantasy Help Desk: Calls that you will never get."
You can listen to it via an RSS news reader by going to
www.watchguard.com/rss/watchguardrfs.xml. You can also subscribe to it via the iTunes
store. Type "radio free security" in the search field. And enjoy.
See his blog entries here and here.