You could download a Trojan that takes advantage of a known vulnerability.
Just… don’t do that?
This is part of Common Sense™. It’s a package that every single human being in a developed country is taught in regards to technology, and has been taught since the 1990s. (2000s for developing countries like the US).
Every single person that interacts with a computer in a professional setting has been taught explicitly how to never have a single virus on their computer. And they have been repeatedly taught this every 6 to 12 months for the last 3 decades. It is only people that purposefully infect themselves or purposefully choose to remain stupid — not ignorant, just stupid — that get infected with Trojans.
Your browser could have a vulnerable plugin, or maybe the user delays updates.
See above, and the previous comment.
I bought a USB drive off a sketchy guy in college which had auto-run Malware on it – but it didn’t work on Ubuntu.
See above. You did not use common sense™. You chose to be stupid, despite your college freshman orientation clearly covering basic safety.
All of these are best security practices. But read more about the swiss cheese model to know why you can’t just tell someone, “run a vulnerable os, you’ll be fine so long as you are perfect and nothing goes wrong.”
Just… don’t do that?
This is part of Common Sense™. It’s a package that every single human being in a developed country is taught in regards to technology, and has been taught since the 1990s. (2000s for developing countries like the US).
Every single person that interacts with a computer in a professional setting has been taught explicitly how to never have a single virus on their computer. And they have been repeatedly taught this every 6 to 12 months for the last 3 decades. It is only people that purposefully infect themselves or purposefully choose to remain stupid — not ignorant, just stupid — that get infected with Trojans.
See above, and the previous comment.
See above. You did not use common sense™. You chose to be stupid, despite your college freshman orientation clearly covering basic safety.
Good luck out there
Sec+ holder, I’ll be fine. So will anyone with any amount of common sense.
Don’t download strange executables. Use trusted sites. keep your browser up to date and run an effective adblock.
Congrats you’ve eliminated 99.9% of all attack vectors in use today. I guarantee you aren’t going to be targeted by the last .1%.
All of these are best security practices. But read more about the swiss cheese model to know why you can’t just tell someone, “run a vulnerable os, you’ll be fine so long as you are perfect and nothing goes wrong.”
Guys I know what I’m doing, I have Sec+
Stand aside, Sec+ holder coming through