The government is urging "white hat" hackers to search for security flaws in software, but also wants them to only pass information about those flaws on to software vendors and the government, not to the rest of the security community as . . . . The government is urging "white hat" hackers to search for security flaws in software, but also wants them to only pass information about those flaws on to software vendors and the government, not to the rest of the security community as is common practice today. Speaking at the annual Black Hat Conference of Information Technology Professionals in Las Vegas Wednesday, Richard Clarke, President Bush's special advisor for cyber space security, said security professionals have an obligation to be responsible with the disclosure of security vulnerabilities. They should first report vulnerabilities to the vendor who makes the software in which the vulnerability is found, and then tell the government if the vendor doesn't take action. Only after a patch for the vulnerability is distributed, he said, should others be notified about the vulnerability. The link for this article located at Internetnews.com is no longer available. . Officials advocate for "ethical" hackers to disclose security vulnerabilities exclusively to developers and regulatory bodies initially.. White Hat Hackers, Software Flaws, Cybersecurity Practices. . Anthony Pell
Responding to an effort by Microsoft [NASDAQ:MSFT] to squelch the full disclosure of software vulnerabilities, a group of "white hat" hackers is putting out a call to other experts, asking them to deluge software vendors with bug reports. "Let's flood the security department of every vendor with new issues.. . .. Responding to an effort by Microsoft [NASDAQ:MSFT] to squelch the full disclosure of software vulnerabilities, a group of "white hat" hackers is putting out a call to other experts, asking them to deluge software vendors with bug reports. "Let's flood the security department of every vendor with new issues. Let's show the world what they would miss and what information could just as easily have stayed in the underground," wrote a security researcher who uses the nickname "HellNbak," in an announcement posted to several security mailing lists last week. So far, only one prominent organization has signed on to the "Information Anarchy 2K01" initiative - a group known as Nomad Mobile Research Center, of whom HellNbak is a member. The link for this article located at Newsbytes is no longer available. . Responding to an effort by Microsoft [NASDAQ:MSFT] to squelch the full disclosure of software vulner. responding, effort, microsoft, [nasdaq, msft], squelch, disclosure, software, vulner. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Get the latest Linux and open source security news straight to your inbox.