Transparent code may make finding issues more easily, but it also makes fixing them more easily.
Also it's the most used system used in the world due to sites most using it. So as more desktop users end up using it, problems server managers wouldn't see or deem important now start appearing.
But also, that is considering the statement that security issues in Linux are more common. Are they though? Is it from some technical research, or gut feeling like thinking all airplanes are dangerous when one falls and there's all the noise from the blood-hungry medias?
About the second point, I didn't write it as well, so rephrasing it:
It's the most used system due to sites, so it got quite wide due to scope. But desktop users from my experience are a bit more prone to making mistakes in their daily usage. So as another scope becomes prelevant, new issues arise, and the ones ignored or not seen start appearing. Also, hackers, either good or bad, would see a system becoming popular among mistake-prone users as a fertile ground for finding issues.
But again, that is considering the claim about having more issues is well-grounded.
Last I checked, FreeBSD frequently includes very outdated versions of stuff like OpenSSL. It also lacks privilege separation for pkg/ports. Of course, there are Linux distributions with these same problems, but there are also ones that don't have them.
Also, a lot of the practical problems with desktop usage stem from most/all of your valuable data being in the home directory and everything running as the same user with no real filesystem restrictions (can be different if you've got something like SELinux configured correctly). AFAIK FreeBSD doesn't do anything to make this less of a problem than Linux.
Linux
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