As Scott McNealy once said at a large gathering of Lotus folks 10 or 11
years ago, "There is no privacy any more. Get over it."
So, I got over it and no longer worry about it.
--R
Loren Faeth wrote:
You are technically right. But for most of us the distinction between
malware and software
You are technically right. But for most of us the distinction
between malware and software used to install malware is a distinction
without a meaningful difference. Nice explanation.
I bestow on you one of my highly coveted "detail awards" otherwise
known as the anal retentive award. It is
I didn't try to worm-out of it, I was just correcting the article's
mistake in saying that the webserver that was installed was mallware.
It was just the means of putting the malware on the net.
When I said they rooted the box, I was referring to gaining access to
the root account, analogous to th
My point exactly. Every OS is vulnerable in some way. (Many ways)
You tried to worm out by saying the malware was "not a virus." THen
you went on to say they probably installed a rootkit. It is
malware, and malware is malware, whether some piece of it is "legit"
or not. Linux is vulnerabl
The "infected" machines/vm's were probably behind on software updates.
Linux still has that fatal flaw called the user, if the user doesn't
update when a bug is found and patched, then the system stays
vulnerable.
In all, what probably happened was a service on the servers was
vulnerable in some w
Uh, Wonko, what was that about no virus on linux. We all know it is
invincible because it is open source...
RIGHT! WHO IS THIS REALLY? (Noah)
At 03:23 PM 9/12/2009, you wrote:
Attack of the open source zombies
...
A security researcher has disco
Attack of the open source zombies
...
A security researcher has discovered a cluster of infected Linux servers
that have been corralled into a special ops botnet of sorts and used to
distribute malware to unwitting people browsing the web.
Each of the infe