11-28-2020, 07:44 AM
@mzltest
As @Mashiro showed, you don't need any third-party solution with Win10 for "security", they are all built-in. You just need to configure them the right way BUT you also need a USER with a bit of common sense. Without it no system will ever be secure.
And here is the kicker, suppose we do have a system set as @Mashiro's Main PC and -to make things harder- we have a user armed with all the common sense in the World, so how secure that machine is if you don't thrust its OWNER (ie M$)?! with all the secrete agreements with their security services and with all the telemetry going on back and forth with its servers..
Conclusion: for someone in China, the Middle East, Russia etc.... Win10 is not secure period!
You can use it to play games (if you enjoy that), anything else then you're breached!..
Another problem is the 0Days vulnerabilities that bypass all those security measures to make the system behave in unexpected ways... This is of course any OS vendor's nightmare and there is a thriving black market for them, even for Linux...
From all the above, we can see that security is always relative and never 100% achieved..
As @Mashiro showed, you don't need any third-party solution with Win10 for "security", they are all built-in. You just need to configure them the right way BUT you also need a USER with a bit of common sense. Without it no system will ever be secure.
And here is the kicker, suppose we do have a system set as @Mashiro's Main PC and -to make things harder- we have a user armed with all the common sense in the World, so how secure that machine is if you don't thrust its OWNER (ie M$)?! with all the secrete agreements with their security services and with all the telemetry going on back and forth with its servers..
Conclusion: for someone in China, the Middle East, Russia etc.... Win10 is not secure period!
You can use it to play games (if you enjoy that), anything else then you're breached!..
Another problem is the 0Days vulnerabilities that bypass all those security measures to make the system behave in unexpected ways... This is of course any OS vendor's nightmare and there is a thriving black market for them, even for Linux...
From all the above, we can see that security is always relative and never 100% achieved..