By Anonymous CowardPosted Wednesday 31st December 2008 12:33 GMT
That film was the antidote to the Western (yee haa, get off your horse and drink your milk) style morality, of goodies and baddies.
It is cyberpunk, not westerns that fuel IT security, and it is that level of complexity and ambiguous morality that is closer to reality.
It is far too simplistic to see it as black and white, and it is far too interesting to see it as shades of grey :)
It is only the vigilantes who see themselves as cowboys, and hey most of them are angling for jobs at MS. The west was not won by the cowboys, no matter how many times you may watch True Grit, it was won by the Pinkerton Detective Agency, basically a private army. Messrs Sundance and Cassidy never stood a chance.
IT security has virtually no good guys, it is just about people protecting their space, and others trying to invade, with arms suppliers on both sides. There is a grungy appeal to it all, but basically it revolves around poking your nose into other people's affairs or giving someone else a really shitty day, normally both :)
By Anonymous CowardPosted Wednesday 31st December 2008 20:32 GMT
The Wild West (note capitals) is not a good model for the security wars. In the Wild West, you had Good Guys, and Bad Guys (note capitals), and all punishment was capital too, with the Good Guys outdrawing the Bad Guys and leaving them bleeding in the dust, or kicking at the end of a noose after swift frontier justice.
In the security wars of the 21st centure, the Bad Guys are still around, mostly robbing farmers and townsfolk with a fountain pen. But the good guys don't have six-shooters anymore. The best the good guys can ever do is mend fences pulled down by the Bad Guys. The good guys never ever return the stolen paryoll or bank deposits. The Bad Guys done spent the whole thing on whiskey.
Oh yeah, every now and then you hear about a Bad Guy who gets busted, or served a billion-zillion-dollar judgement for something you vaguely remember happened back when you were younger and innocent. But you never hear that they actually went to prison, or how old they were when they got out. There's no Boot Hill (note capitals) outside of town where the bodies of cyber-outlaws are buried.
The lesson is one of immorality and helplessness, and infrequent punishment. The Old West mataphor is peoples' way of wishing out loud that John Wayne (not Clint Eastwood, because he's too bad) would ride into town and put a bullet into the Bad Guys, so we could feel something other than depression.
Comments on: 2008: A year of cowboys in IT security
Anyone seen Unforgiven? #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 31st December 2008 12:33 GMT
And no mention of #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 31st December 2008 12:37 GMT
Silver Bullet #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 31st December 2008 13:17 GMT
Cowboys?? #
By Andus McCoatover Posted Wednesday 31st December 2008 15:59 GMT
Sony rootkit? #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 31st December 2008 17:14 GMT
@ ac -And no mention of #
By Kwac Posted Wednesday 31st December 2008 19:26 GMT
@Cowboys?? #
By jake Posted Wednesday 31st December 2008 19:59 GMT
westerns for our times #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 31st December 2008 20:32 GMT
Ultimate security #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Friday 2nd January 2009 04:59 GMT
Waco Kid? #
By g e Posted Monday 5th January 2009 12:14 GMT