iptables
Security is a concept, not an application. You get security in Linux by making the system secure.
No. It wouldn't have any use even if it did.
No, Linux Security cookbook is not a good cookbook. Linux is a computer program and therefore does not have anything to do with food and/or cooking. . .
The use of a Linux Virtual Machine is to run a copy of Linux on your current operation system. This will allow you to run various applications that only run on Linux.
Linux Security Tool Distribution (STD) is really good.
There is security on Linux and there is no security on Windows. Well, there is, but it's quite weak compared to Linux. Among other: -Better rights management -Kernel security modules, some of which were developed by US government, and some by security-specialized companies, so you have the idea. -Since Linux is extensively used for server solutions, you can guess that most of server software is pretty much top-notch.
It is doing quite well.
"Yes. ""Linux"" is a large umbrella of open-source software under which thousands of programs fall. This includes many security programs."
There are an abundant amount of securities in Linux, and most Linux distributions. It would take an extremely long time to list out every "Security" in Linux, as it's built around securities.
All Linux Software Applications are listed categorically. You can get the Applications for Security, Internet, Multimedia, Documents and Linux maintenance. Each list has got the most popular and quality applications that will certainly help you to use the Linux Computer effectively. 1. Security, Anti- Malware, Firewall Linux Software 2. Internet (Email, messengers,IDM) Best free Browsers for Linux 3. Multimedia (Players, Image /Video Editors) 4. Linux Maintenance (Improve speed and Performance) 5. Documents & Texts (Office,Web developers,Bloggers) Best 5 Free Alternatives to Microsoft Office for Linux
No, it is unix-based but Linux is a kernel not an operating system.Ubuntu,Linux Mint,Debian,and puppy Linux,ect. are OS's that use the Linux kernel.
This is a holding question for alternates dealing with long-obsolete Linux distributions, such as Red Hat Linux 9. Please do not split the alternates out. There is no reason to use these distributions; they no longer receive any security updates, may not run on modern hardware, and many modern Linux distributions are free.