... it doesn't take the skills of a hacker to see that Foundstone, a privately owned $20-million-a-year company in Mission Viejo, Calif., is in trouble. It has been accused of widespread software piracy by a leading industry trade group, FORTUNE has learned--charges corroborated by current and former Foundstone employees and by computer printouts obtained by the magazine.. . .. ... it doesn't take the skills of a hacker to see that Foundstone, a privately owned $20-million-a-year company in Mission Viejo, Calif., is in trouble. It has been accused of widespread software piracy by a leading industry trade group, FORTUNE has learned--charges corroborated by current and former Foundstone employees and by computer printouts obtained by the magazine. The trade group, the Software & Information Industry Association, informed Kurtz by letter in May that it intended to pursue copyright-infringement charges against Foundstone. It acted after a confidential source alleged that McClure and Gary Bahadur, Foundstone's chief information officer, routinely spread unlicensed software to the company's 125-member workforce; that Kurtz was aware of that practice; and that in early April the CEO ordered his staff to delete unlicensed software from their computers. "They're gambling with their reputation," says Keith Kupferschmid, head of the association's antipiracy unit, which investigated and found the allegations credible. "That's not a smart thing to do." Kurtz vehemently denies the company engaged in piracy. "We have strict policies against piracy," he says. "We take intellectual property very seriously, given that we are a software company." He adds that Foundstone conducted an internal audit in April, "and we're in compliance." The link for this article located at Fortune is no longer available. . ... it doesn't take the skills of a hacker to see that Foundstone, a privately owned $20-million-a-y. doesn't, skills, hacker, foundstone, privately, owned, $20-million-a-y. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
A wisecracking group of hackers confirmed its claim this week that it spread an antipiracy virus was nothing but a hoax aimed at garnering fame. But members of the group, known as Gobbles Security, conceded that a program it released . . . . A wisecracking group of hackers confirmed its claim this week that it spread an antipiracy virus was nothing but a hoax aimed at garnering fame. But members of the group, known as Gobbles Security, conceded that a program it released to demonstrate the problem was a Trojan horse capable of destroying files on the computers of unwary Unix users. Experts said the bizarre incident, which caused a brief frenzy among some security firms and fans of music file sharing, follows a grand tradition of pranks by the playful hacking group. "I think that the latest Gobbles advisory is genius," said Dave Aitel, head of Immunity Security, a security software and services provider. "Gobbles takes the piss out of all of us, and we need to respect and appreciate that." The link for this article located at WiredNews is no longer available. . A wisecracking group of hackers confirmed its claim this week that it spread an antipiracy virus was. wisecracking, group, hackers, confirmed, claim, spread, antipiracy, virus. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The RIAA is preparing to infect MP3 files in order to audit and eventually disable file swapping, according to a startling claim by hacker group Gobbles. In a posting to the Bugtraq mailing list, Gobbles himself claims to have offered his . . . . The RIAA is preparing to infect MP3 files in order to audit and eventually disable file swapping, according to a startling claim by hacker group Gobbles. In a posting to the Bugtraq mailing list, Gobbles himself claims to have offered his code to the RIAA, creating a monitoring "hydra". "Several months ago, GOBBLES Security was recruited by the RIAA (riaa.org) to invent, create, and finally deploy the future of antipiracy tools. We focused on creating virii/worm hybrids to infect and spread over p2p nets," writes Gobbles. "Until we became RIAA contracters [sic], the best they could do was to passively monitor traffic. Our contributions to the RIAA have given them the power to actively control the majority of hosts using these networks." . The RIAA is set to introduce a method to compromise MP3 files, with the goal of monitoring and eventually curbing file sharing. Discover the details.. Antipiracy Tools,P2P Network Security,MP3 Hacks,File Sharing Audits. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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