In a recent interview with The H, Eben Moglen professor of law and legal history at Columbia University, and the founder, Director-Counsel and Chairman of the Software Freedom Law Center, spoke about his ideas for using simple hardware to free individuals from the tyranny of the client/server model imposed by current web services. . It seems his ideas may be on the way to becoming reality in the form of the FreedomBox. The FreedomBox is described by Moglen as a cheap, low-power, plug-top server running a Debian-Linux-based platform. Small plug-top servers such as the Pogoplug ($99 / The link for this article located at H Security is no longer available. . It seems his ideas may be on the way to becoming reality in the form of the FreedomBox. The FreedomB. recent, interview, moglen, professor, legal, history, columbia, univers. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
We report, you decide. Somehow this company thinks the ability to thwart TCP sequence number attacks makes it 'unhackable.' "Claims of unhackable products come and go in the computer industry, with the unhackable product always ending with a crack in its once-shiny armor. Last week, yet another company claimed to have an unhackable product, this time a Web server, but according to at least one user, the claim may be right.. . .. We report, you decide. Somehow this company thinks the ability to thwart TCP sequence number attacks makes it 'unhackable.' "Claims of unhackable products come and go in the computer industry, with the unhackable product always ending with a crack in its once-shiny armor. Last week, yet another company claimed to have an unhackable product, this time a Web server, but according to at least one user, the claim may be right. Barrington, Illinois-based Bodacion Technologies LLC, last week announced its Hydra Web server. The Hydra is a rack-mountable Web server, aimed at the government, financial services and hosting markets. It supports multiple processors, is built with its own operating system and is so secure that it doesn't need a firewall to protect it, according to Eric Hauk, co-founder of Bodacion. Because Hydra uses an operating system written by Bodacion, it does not support standard Web plug-ins or features such as Active Server Pages or PHP (PHP Hypertext Preprocessor), though it does run Java, Hauk said. Hydra is built around a single 366Mhz Power PC G3 processor from Hauk's former employer Motorola Inc., sports 256M bytes of RAM, a 40G-byte hard disk and a 10/100 Ethernet port, Hauk said. The server can accept up to three more processor cards, but is limited to a total of 256M bytes of RAM for now, he said. The link for this article located at IT World is no longer available. . Delving into Bodacion's assertion of an impregnable server in the face of TCP sequence vulnerabilities and its proprietary operating system design.. Server Security,BodacionTechnologies,TCP Protection,Web Server Technology,Unhackable Solutions. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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