Alerts This Week
Warning Icon 1 626
Alerts This Week
Warning Icon 1 626

Stay Ahead With Linux Security News

Filter Icon Refine news
X Clear Filters
X Clear Filters
View More

Get the latest News and Insights

Get the latest Linux and open source security news straight to your inbox.

Community Poll

What got you started with Linux?

No answer selected. Please try again.
Please select either existing option or enter your own, however not both.
Please select minimum {0} answer(s).
Please select maximum {0} answer(s).
/main-polls/150-what-got-you-started-with-linux?task=poll.vote&format=json
150
radio
0
[{"id":483,"title":"Self-taught through trial and error","votes":549,"type":"x","order":1,"pct":78.54,"resources":[]},{"id":484,"title":"Formal training or courses","votes":30,"type":"x","order":2,"pct":4.29,"resources":[]},{"id":485,"title":"A job that required it","votes":34,"type":"x","order":3,"pct":4.86,"resources":[]},{"id":486,"title":"Other","votes":86,"type":"x","order":4,"pct":12.3,"resources":[]}] ["#ff5b00","#4ac0f2","#b80028","#eef66c","#60bb22","#b96a9a","#62c2cc"] ["rgba(255,91,0,0.7)","rgba(74,192,242,0.7)","rgba(184,0,40,0.7)","rgba(238,246,108,0.7)","rgba(96,187,34,0.7)","rgba(185,106,154,0.7)","rgba(98,194,204,0.7)"] 350
bottom 200
Loading...

Explore Latest Linux Security news

We found -3 articles for you...
77

BIND 9 Security Review: Critical Issues Raised By D. J. Bernstein

This post by D. J. Bernstein, author of djbdns, a "secure" DNS server, wrote this message prompted by the recent problems experienced with BIND 9 and its "300000 lines of bad code." "BIND 9 is good code, you say? The BIND programmers learned their lesson from these security disasters and rewrote everything from scratch? Professor Bernstein's opinion differs. . .. This post by D. J. Bernstein, author of djbdns, a "secure" DNS server, wrote this message prompted by the recent problems experienced with BIND 9 and its "300000 lines of bad code." "BIND 9 is good code, you say? The BIND programmers learned their lesson from these security disasters and rewrote everything from scratch? Professor Bernstein's opinion differs Date: 1 Feb 2001 07:29:42 -0000 Message-ID: From: "D. J. Bernstein" To: bugtraq@ Subject: Time to un-BIND your network! Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Disposition: inline It's interesting that the NXT security disaster and the TSIG security disaster were both introduced as new features in BIND 8.2. Paul Vixie blames BIND's problems on ``sleazeware produced in a drunken fury by a bunch of U C Berkeley grad students.' But BIND 4 was only 20000 lines of bad code. BIND 8.2 is 150000 lines of bad code. BIND 9 is good code, you say? The BIND programmers learned their lesson from these security disasters and rewrote everything from scratch? Let's look at the facts: * BIND 9 was funded in August 1998. There was a public statement that ``code drop has been made to funding organizations' in March 1999. Guess when BIND 8.2 was released? That's right: March 1999. * BIND 9 was made available for public testing in February 2000. The official BIND 9.0.0 release was in September 2000. _Hundreds_ of bugs have been discovered in BIND 9 since then. (The list of previously discovered bugs---presumably even more embarrassing--- doesn't seem to be publicly available. Gee, what a surprise.) * By all accounts, BIND 9 chokes even more often than BIND 8 does. Sample from thebind9-users mailing list last week: two sysadmins at large sites reported that, within a few days, BIND 9.1.0 stopped responding and started burning CPU time. Bottom line: The Buggy Internet Name Daemon lives on. BIND 9 is 300000 lines of bad code. Does anyone seriously believe that none of BIND 9's bugs can be exploited by attackers? I don't. But I can relax, because I've been free of my BINDs for the past year; I wrote my own DNS software, djbdns. To learn more: yp djbdns works for citysearch.com and pobox.com and one site that handles nearly 400000 *.com's; I think it'll work for you too. It's free, it doesn't crash, and it doesn't let attackers take over your machine. ---Dan . D. J. Bernstein analyzes vulnerabilities within the BIND 9 DNS server, advocating for solutions such as djbdns to mitigate potential security risks.. BIND Issues, DNS Server Security, D.J. Bernstein, Open Source DNS, Network Reliability. . LinuxSecurity.com Team

Calendar 2 Feb 23, 2001 User Avatar LinuxSecurity.com Team Server Security
82

Exploring Government-Mandated Network Security Standards for Internet Firms

Do you think there should be network security standards set by the government? According to MSNBC "insurance companies and the security industry are considering quasi-government regulation to try to compel Internet firms to take basic security steps." This was . . . . Do you think there should be network security standards set by the government? According to MSNBC "insurance companies and the security industry are considering quasi-government regulation to try to compel Internet firms to take basic security steps." This was probably complled by the fact that there are "125,000 networks with the same flaw that allowed the attacks" that occured six months ago on major US websites. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . With rising digital threats, a debate emerges on mandatory cybersecurity rules for online companies, balancing user protection and industry innovation.. Network Security Standards, Internet Safety, Cyber Attack Prevention, Government Regulation. . Anthony Pell

Calendar 2 Aug 12, 2000 User Avatar Anthony Pell Government
News Add Esm H340

Get the latest News and Insights

Get the latest Linux and open source security news straight to your inbox.

Community Poll

What got you started with Linux?

No answer selected. Please try again.
Please select either existing option or enter your own, however not both.
Please select minimum {0} answer(s).
Please select maximum {0} answer(s).
/main-polls/150-what-got-you-started-with-linux?task=poll.vote&format=json
150
radio
0
[{"id":483,"title":"Self-taught through trial and error","votes":549,"type":"x","order":1,"pct":78.54,"resources":[]},{"id":484,"title":"Formal training or courses","votes":30,"type":"x","order":2,"pct":4.29,"resources":[]},{"id":485,"title":"A job that required it","votes":34,"type":"x","order":3,"pct":4.86,"resources":[]},{"id":486,"title":"Other","votes":86,"type":"x","order":4,"pct":12.3,"resources":[]}] ["#ff5b00","#4ac0f2","#b80028","#eef66c","#60bb22","#b96a9a","#62c2cc"] ["rgba(255,91,0,0.7)","rgba(74,192,242,0.7)","rgba(184,0,40,0.7)","rgba(238,246,108,0.7)","rgba(96,187,34,0.7)","rgba(185,106,154,0.7)","rgba(98,194,204,0.7)"] 350
bottom 200
Your message here