pfSense is a free, powerful firewall and routing application that allows you to expand your network without compromising its security. Started in 2004 as a child project of m0n0wall -- a security project that focuses on embedded systems -- pfSense has had more than 1 million downloads and is used to protect networks of all sizes, from home offices to large enterprises. pfSense has an active development community, and more features are being added in each release to further improve its flexibility, scalability, and, of course, security. Have you considered using an open source firewall/router solution for securing your network traffic? Check out the features and performance of a free open source firewall/router solution in this informative article. . The link for this article located at linux.com is no longer available. . The link for this article located at linux.com is no longer available.. pfsense, powerful, firewall, routing, application, allows, expand, network. . Brittany Day
An anonymous group of malicious hackers reopened an online store that sells the stolen source code of prominent software products and is offering the code for Cisco Systems (Profile, Products, Articles) Inc.'s PIX firewall software to interested parties for $24,000, according to messages posted in online discussion groups. . . .. An anonymous group of malicious hackers reopened an online store that sells the stolen source code of prominent software products and is offering the code for Cisco Systems (Profile, Products, Articles) Inc.'s PIX firewall software to interested parties for $24,000, according to messages posted in online discussion groups. The Source Code Club reappeared online Monday, using messages to online security discussion groups to announce that it was back in business. The group is using e-mail and messages posted in a Usenet group to communicate with customers and receive orders for the source code of several security products, including Cisco's PIX 6.3.1 firewall and intrusion detection system (IDS) software from Enterasys Networks (Profile, Products, Articles) Inc., the group said. Cisco did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The club first surfaced in July, using a Web page with an address in the Ukraine and messages posted to the Full-Disclosure security discussion list to advertise its wares. Initially, the Source Code Club said it was selling "corporate intel(ligence)" to its customers, along with other unnamed services, according to a message posted in July to the Full-Disclosure mailing list by a group or individual using the name "Larry Hobbles." The link for this article located at infoworld.com is no longer available. . An anonymous group of malicious hackers reopened an online store that sells the stolen source code o. anonymous, group, malicious, hackers, reopened, online, store, sells, stolen, source. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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