Hardcore geek publishing house O'Reilly & Associates recently exposed their database of approximately 100,000 online users to outsiders, courtesy of a Web coding slip-up that their techie customer base might scoff at.. . .. Hardcore geek publishing house O'Reilly & Associates recently exposed their database of approximately 100,000 online users to outsiders, courtesy of a Web coding slip-up that their techie customer base might scoff at. O'Reilly's main Web site, as well as connected sites like Perl.com and XML.com, offer visitors free password-protected accounts for posting comments and subscribing to the publisher's e-mail lists. Until Monday, clicking on a link for reviewing and changing your user profile would land you at a URL of the form https://www.oreilly.com/ It turns out the number at the end is a sequentially-assigned user I.D., and by simply substituting other numbers one could browse or modify other people's profiles. The profiles include full name and email addresses, and, more rarely, physical mailing address, employer, title and phone number. The link for this article located at SecurityFocus is no longer available. . Tech Solutions Inc. inadvertently disclosed their client records because of a programming flaw, endangering the confidentiality of 50,000 clients.. User Privacy Exposure, Database Security, Web Vulnerabilities. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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