On Fri, May 17, 2013 at 03:46:14AM +0000, David Scheidt wrote:
> Bill Horne <
bi...@horneqrm.net> wrote:
> :The problem is that most web-design programs made before 2000 are only
> :coded for ftp, and turning off ftp is an effective way to force users ...
>
> It's 2013. Inability to use a secure file transfer program isn't
> really a good reason to support insecurity, and neither is suporting
> seriously obsolete web design tools.
My son drives a 1997 Buick. It's "obsolete" by your logic. It's also
capable of going 65 on the Interstate, gets about-the-same-mileage as
any other car, and moves him from home to job in a reliable
manner. Plus, the roof doesn't leak (I've owner cars where the roof
/did/ leak), and all the ergs that /might/ be saved by him purchasing
some newer, shinier model were amortized years ago.
"Obsolete" is in the eye of the owner: if it gets the job done, it's
not obsolete, by definition. I've had customer who ran DOS-based
accounting software in 2006. It's what their staff was trained on, and
it got the job done, so they used it.
Dreamweaver and similar programs are very expensive: they are
professional-grade web design tools, but cost the better part of a
thousand dollars to put in service. Small design shops that are
watching every penny sometimes choose to make do with older releases:
That's /their/ choice, not mine.
"Security" is relative: given that the material is, by its nature,
intended for public distribution, I don't see why keeping it "secure"
would be important. If you're referring to the ftp software itself
being insecure, I disagree: some /extensions/ have been problematic,
but the basic functions are no more "insecure" than http. /Any/
software needs maintenance: security and bug fixes are the bread and
butter of the sysadmin's day, and ftp daemons are no exception.
> : ...to use the brain-dead preformated sites and tools. Why an ISP
> : would want to do that is anyone's guess.
> Lower support costs, or they want to kill the service entirely.
They don't want to kill the service entirely: they just want to hobble
its users to the point where they go to commercial sites in
disgust. That's a win-win for the ISP: they get to claim that they
include "free" websites with their monthly fee, but charge extra for
webspace that's actually usable.
Bill, who is a Verizon DSL customer and therefore entitled to complain
about it.
--
Bill Horne
(Remove QRM from my address to write to me directly)