I'm not surprised. I have been inside NASA . While the people there stuck me as both intelligent and conscientious, they are forced (due to lack of funds) to keep ancient technology online for longer than they ought to, and have little say in how secure it may be (at least the outward facing stuff - no comment on their internal network). Since they are administratively kept from "staying current" with patches etc., this is inevitable. So compromising 13 servers sounds like par for the course.
Pity, since NASA is (mostly) R&D and their outward facing stuff is (mostly) scientific and educational, so that means that some kids aren't going to get to see (insert cool space technology here) because some k13313z decided that r00ting one box wasn't enough. G On or about 2003.12.19 10:12:45 +0000, Simon Smith ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) said: > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > Hash: SHA1 > > Greetings, > I've recently been told that 13 NASA servers were compromised by > some group in Brazil? Can anyone point me to any articles on this incident? > - -- > Regards, -- Gregory A. Gilliss, CISSP E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Computer Security WWW: http://www.gilliss.com/greg/ PGP Key fingerprint 2F 0B 70 AE 5F 8E 71 7A 2D 86 52 BA B7 83 D9 B4 14 0E 8C A3 _______________________________________________ Full-Disclosure - We believe in it. Charter: http://lists.netsys.com/full-disclosure-charter.html