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Ed Moyle Quotes

«[From a making-it-work perspective, having a new extension for macros is a good idea, said network security expert Ed Moyle.] It allows virus-checking software in an e-mail to filter on that extension and to search files coming in with that extension more carefully, or to exclude them altogether on a content filtering gateway while allowing the majority of the office docs to pass through without hindrance, ... My only concern is making a smooth transition to the new format.»
Author: Ed Moyle
«[In Moyle's opinion, a balancing act of sorts is required.] Make diversity too small and you increase the impact of population-level events, make it too diverse and you can reduce manageability and thereby make individual-level events more likely, ... Heterogeneity has to be balanced with manageability for the organization's maximum benefit.»
Author: Ed Moyle
«The idea sounds good because a lot of viruses have used the macro capability of Office for propagation purposes and that's a huge problem, ... Having a new extension for this will allow the virus-checking software on e-mail gateways to filter on that particular extension, either to search files coming in with that extension more carefully, or to exclude them altogether.»
Author: Ed Moyle
«Those that favor the preservation of the current model fear that ceding oversight to the U.N. would result in a less 'laissez-faire' environment -- that it would open the door to tighter control and thereby [engender] all the trappings of control: potential taxation, inefficiency, or restriction on free speech.»
Author: Ed Moyle
«[The U.S. is expected to ask why it should give up oversight of something -- the Internet -- that initially was developed by its military under the aegis of the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA).] The U.N. is understandably nervous about the ability of the U.S. to exert control over ICANN under the current structure, ... even if that ability isn't currently utilized to any significant degree.»
Author: Ed Moyle
«[Some nations remain wary of the U.S. calling the shots. In August, for example, the Bush administration objected to creation of an .xxx domain for adult-content Web sites.] Since all ICANN decisions are subject to approval by the U.S. Department of Commerce, President Bush can ultimately decide whether or not to allow that change to proceed, ... No other country has that level of voice in the process.»
Author: Ed Moyle
«As a technologist, I'm not convinced that the U.N. is necessarily better equipped to deal with these issues than any number of other possible oversight bodies, including the U.S. Department of Commerce.»
Author: Ed Moyle
«There's no fundamental difference between using QuickBooks to embezzle funds and using a ledger to embezzle funds, ... The technology just changes how the fraud is accomplished and maybe who commits it; it doesn't change why it's committed. As long as there are criminals, they will find a way to use the existing mechanisms to their advantage.»
Author: Ed Moyle
«If the U.N. intends to softly encourage the transition to IPv6 via policy -- or merely wishes to coordinate or 'track' the deployment of IPv6 over time -- the impact will likely be minimal, ... But if they are going to take a stronger approach -- which they could theoretically do with the new authority -- the impact would once again be tremendous.»
Author: Ed Moyle
«The idea sounds good because a lot of viruses have used the macro capability of Office for propagation purposes and that's a huge problem. Having a new extension for this will allow the virus-checking software on e-mail gateways to filter on that particular extension, either to search files coming in with that extension more carefully, or to exclude them altogether.»
Author: Ed Moyle

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