I take it you happened to read one of my suggestions posted in another thread?
No, but I read further anyway.
It should be just as common sense to anyone by now that the Internet is populated and put in movement by people from the real world, being nothing more than an extension of the latter, and therefore not even so different.
I agree and agree
d, as I was the one who first pointed out (that because the Internet is still a part of the real world and is not some secondary world with different rules and different ethics) that the defense of websites which intentionally infect visitors with malware is questionable and the motives of the defense perhaps unethical.
I'm going to slightly edit your parallel of my analogy
not for meaning but for legilbility:
At an extreme, there are some people who sincerely advocate that we should no longer leave our doors unlocked. They expect everyone to switch over to locking and securing their establishments -- despite the fact that not everyone has the time, patience, and intelligence to do so.
I thank you for this analogy, however extreme it may be, because it illustrates that
we are fundamentally not arguing the same case. You are saying that advice to use Linux is sound advice, just as advice to lock one's doors is sound advice. I completely agree. I, on the other hand, am saying that people who choose not to use Linux are no more asking to be hacked than people who choose to leave their doors unlocked are asking to be burgled. In a US court, no burglar would be found Not Guilty if he was able to prove beyond reasonable doubt that the prosecution intentionally left their house unlocked. Even if he could prove this, he would still be found Guilty. Leaving one's house unlocked on purpose is
not the same thing as intending to be robbed. They are two different things.
In fact, I could have every door on my house locked but have signs all over my front yard that challenge burglars to try their luck and to attempt to burgle me. That would be equivalent to a seasoned user of Linux going to a website that attracts experienced hackers and challenging them to crack his security and wipe out his hard drive.
People may choose to leave their doors unlocked for matters of convenience. They are taking a risk being burgled, but that they are willing to take the risk does
not equate to deserving to be burgled or to not having a solid argument in court against the perpetrator who burgled them. The exact same thing applies for Windows users, non-Firefox users, etc. with regards to malware.
And the problem, as you full well know but are perhaps reluctant to admit, is much more complicated than a lock-and-door scenario. Even a severely retarded human being can figure out how to lock and unlock a door. Figuring out how to use Linux is something that not everyone has the time or the intelligence for. Smart, young individuals -- medical students, law school students, and college undergraduates and graduate students whose expertise lies in fields that have little to do with computer technology -- do not have the time or the money to install Linux on a spare machine, experiment with it, figure out how it works, and fully optimize it. Do these people run the risk of being hacked in the interim period between school and mastering Linux? Yes. Do they
deserve to be hacked? No.
I have an extreme counter-example for you to partner off with your door-and-lock analogy and then I'm done:
Say we have a woman. This woman has normal female anatomy. In fact, she is quite pretty. In addition, her total body weight is beneath your threshold for upper arm strength. Does that mean she
can be picked up by you? Yes. Does that mean she
deserves to be or
is asking to be picked up by you? No. Picking up is relatively harmless; how about abduction? Can she be picked up by you, stuffed into the trunk of your car, and taken 2000 miles from her home? Yes. Does she
deserve to be? Of course not.
This woman has a normal human brain. One property of the human brain is that it can be sent into a deep sleep by certain chemicals that are easily administered without the person's knowledge. Does that mean that you
could slip a date r*** drug into her drink? Yes. Does that mean that she
deserves to be date r***ing if you fool her into turning her head away from her drink and in the meantime you slip some date r*** drug into her drink? No.
Now so far I've provided examples where the woman has little to no ability to change her circumstance. You could argue, "Sakunyuusha, people
can learn Linux. People
can't change the brains they're born with to be immune to hypnotic drugs." Fair enough. But what about martial arts? Let's say this woman knows zero martial arts. She doesn't know how to use a gun or a knife. She couldn't defend herself if her life quite literally depended on it. Is it true that a defenseless human being
can be attacked, r***ing, murdered? Yes. Is it true that a defenseless human being
deserves to be attacked, r***ing, or murdered?
No. Even though she could have learned karate or judo, the fact that she did not does
not mean that you have the legal or (fuck the law) ethical right to do with this woman as you please.
What I'm getting at is, you seem to be somebody who believes that Might is Right. I think that that's an indefensibly inhumane worldview. People who leave their doors unlocked do not deserve to be burgled. People who do not know how to defend themselves do not deserve to be assaulted. And people who do not know how to use better computer security do not deserve to be hacked.