gbono23 wrote:Again keep in mind the originators need on this thread. It was to keep guns out of the hands of his kids. Will a fingerprint safe do that? I would think that it would. Will it keep a bad guy from getting the gun if he really wants it, probably not. But keep this in mind as well, a friend in Law Enforcement told me that the average time a burglar wants to be in a house is less that 5 minutes. If they can't get what they want in that time, its not worth it. Are they going to go to the trouble of lifting a print and faking out a finger print scanner, highly unlikely. At that point a bad guy will use either a crowbar or bolt cutter and remove the whole safe from the wall. It is unlikely that they will try to get into a large multigun floor safe, they may try, but unless they are sure of your schedule, they don't want to stay in the house that long.
All very true. Nothing is 100% secure, and anyone that wants in bad enough will be able to do so. Your security doesn't need to be like it is at Fort Mead, thought if you're like me, you wish it was, but then I tend to be overkill, but I've never had issues either. I think that my security preferences just comes from my personal likes and dislikes, as well as having worked in IT Security awhile. For example, I can SSH into my home machine, but you need to use port knocking along with an alternative port since using port 22 isn't advisable. I also have connection throttling setup in iptables and ip6tables, as well as fail2ban and denyhosts running and configured certain ways. (I would go one step further and lock it down to certain IPs or ranges, but I'm not always remoting into it from the same location with the same IP / IP range.) Of course I could really tweak it further like switching from TCP/IP to IPX/SPX and then back to TCP/IP to help mitigate any hackers since most wouldn't know how to deal with such an old and little-used protocol such as IPX/SPX, which like TCP/IP, is routable. I could also subnet and use VLANs to add in layers, but I don't. I know it's a computer and not a gun, but it shows layer of security, which I like. I also don't do everything I could, so again, middle of the road is key, for me at least. The hard drive is encrypted, and it's in somewhat secure room. Physical security is the weakest link in that chain. I like security, but not everyone does.
Yes, the fingerprint safe will probably work to keep his kids out, but it seems to me (in my opinion), that he wants to do the minimal vs. a bit more. Security is largely about balance between totally locked down and unusable to wide open. Again, those fingerprint readers aren't the best quality, so you get what you pay for.