The Apache SpamAssassin spam filter has been shipping with a rule which defined any year past 2009 as "grossly in the future" and adding 3.2 to the email's spam score. The default threshold for spam is 5.0, so the error makes it much more likely that legitimate mail will be falsely marked as spam.. The problem was noted by Mike Cardwell, a UK based developer, who brought up the issue on the spam filter's mailing list. The problem had been reported in 2008 and fixed in the SpamAssassin repositories, but the rules were not backported to 3.2 for users until new years day when the omitted update was noticed. The link for this article located at H Security is no longer available. . The problem was noted by Mike Cardwell, a UK based developer, who brought up the issue on the spam f. apache, spamassassin, filter, shipping, which, defined. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
POPULAR OPEN SOURCE virus scanner Clamav has been hastily updated this morning to remove a 'false positive': the scanner was detecting the GNU Public Licence as a virus. Thousands of Open Source programs, including Clamav itself, include a copy of this licence, and since it is a plain text file it is incapable of containing a virus. . . .. POPULAR OPEN SOURCE virus scanner Clamav has been hastily updated this morning to remove a 'false positive': the scanner was detecting the GNU Public Licence as a virus. Thousands of Open Source programs, including Clamav itself, include a copy of this licence, and since it is a plain text file it is incapable of containing a virus. The incident may well bring a smirk to the lips of those who object to the GPL on ideological grounds. The cry is often heard that the GPL is 'viral', since you can't redistribute GPL code with proprietary code without the result being 'infected' with the GPL. At least not if the result is a 'derivative work' of the GPL code. What exactly constitutes a derivative work is something we'll leave to the lawyer-geeks of places like groklaw.net. The link for this article located at theinquirer.net is no longer available. . Clamav enhancements rolled out to address inaccuracies in identifying GNU Public License as a virus within widely used open-source security tool.. Clamav Update, Open Source Security, GNU Public Licence, False Positive, Virus Threat. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
An Australian software developer is considering suing McAfee after the antivirus company wrongly identified his Internet setup program as a Trojan horse in a recent virus definition update. . . .. Mark Griffiths of Brisbane said he is "not ruling out" filing a lawsuit against McAfee even after the antivirus company released on Thursday an update to its DAT virus definition file that fixes the false positive. Griffiths sells the Internet setup program, ISPWizard, to Internet service providers in more than 20 countries. McAfee antivirus software on ISP customers' computers labeled ISPWizard as the BackDoor-AKZ Trojan horse. Because the McAfee software automatically eliminates the program from the users' system, many were not able to connect to their ISP. Griffiths said he was first notified about the mistake on Sept. 2 by ISPs in the United States. They had been alerted by their customers, who had not been able to access their Internet services. Immediately after being notified, Griffiths sent an e-mail to McAfee but did not hear back from the antivirus vendor until Monday. . Jessica Turner from Melbourne is contemplating legal action against Norton for mistakenly labeling her application as a threat, leading to interference with her internet provider's services.. ISPWizard, Antivirus Mislabeling, Malware Detection Issues. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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