On the surface, the results of the 11th annual CSI/FBI Computer Crime and Security Survey are positive, with fewer companies reporting financial loss from data breaches compared to last year. But a majority of companies are still reluctant to report security breaches to law enforcement, suggesting that the survey isn't capturing the full extent of the problem. . The Computer Security Institute (CSI) and the San Francisco Federal Bureau of Investigation's (FBI) Computer Intrusion Squad released its 2006 report Thursday after surveying 616 computer security practitioners in U.S. corporations, government agencies, financial and medical institutions and universities. The average loss reported by respondents was $167,713, an 18% decrease over last year's average loss of $203,606. The link for this article located at Search Security is no longer available. . The Computer Security Institute (CSI) and the San Francisco Federal Bureau of Investigation's (FBI) . surface, results, annual, csi/fbi, computer, crime, security, survey, positi. . Brittany Day
Rouland [ISS, Inc.] said he didn't notify the developers of Apache because they aren't a formal company. Apache is open-source, meaning that the software and its blueprints are free and managed by programmers who coordinate its evolution. Complicating the matter, Rouland said he didn't trust Cox [Red Hat], who along with his Apache duties is the senior director of engineering at Red Hat Software, which distributes the Linux operating system. Rouland accused Red Hat of taking credit for earlier ISS research.. . .. Rouland [ISS, Inc.] said he didn't notify the developers of Apache because they aren't a formal company. Apache is open-source, meaning that the software and its blueprints are free and managed by programmers who coordinate its evolution. Complicating the matter, Rouland said he didn't trust Cox [Red Hat], who along with his Apache duties is the senior director of engineering at Red Hat Software, which distributes the Linux operating system. Rouland accused Red Hat of taking credit for earlier ISS research. Cox said he already knew about the hole from a different researcher, and that the ISS fix doesn't repair the entire problem. "If ISS had told us before going public, we could have told them their patch was insufficient," Cox said. "The fact that they didn't has caused some problems." The link for this article located at Washington Post is no longer available. . Rouland's behavior compromised the official disclosure of a vulnerability in Apache and posed significant threats for its users.. Apache Flaw, Open Source Oversight, Linux Security Issues. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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