Archive for January 2002
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Find the Cost of (Virus) Freedom
Find the Cost of (Virus) Freedom. Nimda, Sir Cam, Code Red and friends caused more than 50,000 security incidents last year. But experts say the estimates of billions in clean-up costs are pure guesswork. By Michelle Delio. [Wired News]
New Shockwave Virus Uncovered
New Shockwave Virus Uncovered. Cosmiverse.com Jan 10 2002 4:09PM ET [Tech latest]
Rare Linux virus on the loose
vnunet: Rare Linux virus on the loose
It has emerged in the last week that another of those rare Linux viruses may be on the loose. And this one has strong similarities to October’s Remote Shell Trojan (RST) that was largely dismissed by the Linux community.
In a posting to a security mailing list at the end of December, SecurityFocus brought ‘RST.b’ to the internet community’s attention.
Users lose confidence in antivirus software
vnunet: Users lose confidence in AV software
“The problem is that most of the software available today is reactive and not proactive. They are signature based and are linked to a database. If a new virus comes along that it does not recognise it will get through,” he added.
OKENA Pioneers Next-Generation Intrusion Prevention
TechnologyEvaluation.com: OKENA Pioneers Next-Generation Intrusion Prevention: “Intrusion prevention has evolved as a smarter alternative to intrusion detection. Pioneer OKENA has mapped application behaviors into rules, and is using these behavior rules to prevent intrusions up front. This second-generation approach offers substantial bottom line savings, and frees up IT resources for other tasks.”
Microsoft warns millions about IE security flaw
Microsoft warns millions about IE security flaw. vnunet.com Jan 4 2002 11:52AM ET [Tech latest]
Ditch IE – veteran bug hunter
Ditch IE – veteran bug hunter. Guninski nails another vulnerability [The Register]
Dave Winer on software patents: “terrorism”

Dave Winer: General comment on software patents. It’s terrorism, something we’re familiar with after Sept 11, applied to technology. Our terrorists wear suits and have law degrees. It will result in bankruptcies, orphaned software, and users without tools to use. The lawyers will get rich (and the technologists who think like lawyers). Ethical technologists who welcome competition because they want to be compelled to create the best products will go by the wayside, replaced by pseudo-technologists who use lawyers as competitive weapons. Who’s to blame? In the US, it’s the USPTO who grant patent abusers a legal basis to hijack open formats and protocols and crash them into products and services offered by developers of all sizes. State-sponsored terrorism. [Scripting News]
