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But where to get this information in a timely fashion? There are a number of web sites that offer the latest security news. There are also a number of mailing lists dedicated to this topic. In fact, your vendor most likely has such a list where vulnerabilities and the corresponding fix is announced. This is an excellent way to stay abreast of issues effecting your release, and is highly recommended. http://linuxsecurity.com is a good site for Linux only issues. They also have weekly newsletters available: http://www.linuxsecurity.com/general/newsletter.html.
Also, many distributions have utilities that will automatically update your installed packages via ftp. This can be run as a cron job on a regular basis and is a painless way to go if you have ready Internet access.
This is not a one time process -- it is ongoing. It is important to stay current. So watch those security notices. And subscribe to your vendor's security mailing list today! If you have cable modem, DSL, or other full time connection, there is no excuse not to do this religiously. All distributions make this easy enough!
One last note: any time a new package is installed, there is also a chance that a new or revised configuration has been installed as well. Which means that if this package is a server of some kind, it may be enabled as a result of the update. This is bad manners, but it can happen, so be sure to run netstat or comparable to verify your system is where you want it after any updates or system changes. In fact, do it periodically even if there are no such changes.
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Generated: 2007-01-26 17:58:11