Fedora Project leaders have banned a popular penetration-testing tool from their repository out of concern it could saddle the organization with legal burdens.. The move came on Monday in a unanimous vote by the Fedora Project's board of directors rejecting a request that SQLNinja be added to the archive of open-source applications. It came even as a long list of other hacker tools are included in the bundle and was harshly criticized by some security watchers. The link for this article located at The Register UK is no longer available. . The Fedora Project has officially removed SQLNinja from its repository following emerging legal issues tied to the well-known penetration-testing software.. Fedora Project, SQLNinja, Penetration Testing, Legal Issues, Security Concerns. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
In an appeals court filing, the US government praises a lower-court ruling that bans the hacker magazine from posting the DeCSS decryption code Uncle Sam is siding with the movie industry in a case that prevents a magazine from . . . . In an appeals court filing, the US government praises a lower-court ruling that bans the hacker magazine from posting the DeCSS decryption code Uncle Sam is siding with the movie industry in a case that prevents a magazine from posting and linking to software that makes it possible to decrypt DVD security. In a filing submitted to the 2nd US Circuit Court of Appeals in New York, the Justice Department lashed out at hackers and praised a lower court ruling that bans hacker magazine 2600 from publishing a code known as DeCSS. The link for this article located at ZDNet UK is no longer available. . U.S. authorities commend ruling that stops hacking publication from disseminating DeCSS code, showing support for the movie sector in digital rights enforcement.. DeCSS Code, Digital Rights, Legal Ruling. . Anthony Pell
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