Additional copies of Cisco code files for the Internetwork Operating System (IOS) may be circulating on the Internet, after the thief compromised a Sun Microsystems server on Cisco's network, then briefly posted a link to the source code files on a file server belonging to the University of Utrecht in the Netherlands, according to Alexander Antipov, a security expert at Positive Technologies, a security consulting company in Moscow, who was interviewed by e-mail and instant messaging service. . . .. More details about the computer code stolen from Cisco Systems surfaced on Tuesday, including new samples of the source code and information on how the code was distributed, four days after a Russian Web site reported news of the theft and posted sample code files to support the claim. Additional copies of Cisco code files for the Internetwork Operating System (IOS) may be circulating on the Internet, after the thief compromised a Sun Microsystems server on Cisco's network, then briefly posted a link to the source code files on a file server belonging to the University of Utrecht in the Netherlands, according to Alexander Antipov, a security expert at Positive Technologies, a security consulting company in Moscow, who was interviewed by e-mail and instant messaging service. The link for this article located at LinuxWorld is no longer available. . More details about the computer code stolen from Cisco Systems surfaced on Tuesday, including new sa. additional, copies, cisco, files, internetwork, operating, system, (ios), circulating. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
IN WHAT SOME observers see as a significant ruling for the future of the Internet, a U.S. federal judge Thursday issued a permanent injunction barring an online hacker publication from linking to Web sites where visitors can download illegal code, such . . . . IN WHAT SOME observers see as a significant ruling for the future of the Internet, a U.S. federal judge Thursday issued a permanent injunction barring an online hacker publication from linking to Web sites where visitors can download illegal code, such as De-Content Scrambling System (DeCSS). If Web site operators know that the offending code is available at linked sites and offer the links with the intent to facilitate the spread of the code, they are in violation of the anti-trafficking provision of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), ruled New York State District Court Judge Lewis A. Kaplan in a 93-page court document. The link for this article located at Infoworld is no longer available. . IN WHAT SOME observers see as a significant ruling for the future of the Internet, a U.S. federal ju. observers, significant, ruling, future, internet, federal. . Anthony Pell
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