IWETHEY v. 0.3.0 | TODO
1,095 registered users | 0 active users | 0 LpH | Statistics
Login | Create New User
IWETHEY Banner

Welcome to IWETHEY!

New Blaster worm articles...
From the Inquirer
[link|http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=11045"|New York City mega Call Centre falls to Blaster worm. All phones went to busy at 311 because of security breach.
]
[link|http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=11042|Blaster underlines the emptiness of Microsoft's "security initiative"]

[link|http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=11043|Microsoft recommends hard drive format for Blaster worm. No.... no... don't do it...]

Enjoy
New That second one is great
If even one percent of professional sysadmins are as pissed off and frustrated as this guy, things are about ready to start changing.
===

Implicitly condoning stupidity since 2001.
New Something has changed...
[link|http://uptime.netcraft.com/up/graph/?host=windowsupdate.microsoft.com|Windows update] is now running on Linux... (through Akamai)

Second thought: "through Linux" is probably more accurate as IIS is still serving the contents
Expand Edited by scoenye Aug. 16, 2003, 07:48:43 AM EDT
New Nothing is going to change, ever
Americans are traditionally anti-intellectual. Stupidity is a virtue, intelligence a threat.


-drl
New One columnist's musings

SUPPOSE you ran a company that created a product, and as the founder, you made very public promises that this product would be reliable and safe.

Then, a few months later, a problem is found that dramatically compromises both the reliability and safety of the product. On a global scale, your product is no longer considered either reliable or safe.

If you ran this company, what would happen internally? How would you respond to this crisis? Who would be accountable? Would heads roll?

When the Blaster worm went racing across the Internet this week, Microsoft found itself in the grip of this scenario -- again. The software giant's co-founder and chief software architect, Bill Gates, announced just last year that "Trustworthy Computing" was going to be a major initiative. Gates acknowledged what Microsoft's critics had alleged for years: that its products were full of bugs that compromise security, making them risky for use in critical applications.

Despite a push that included 10 weeks off from new development to find and squash bugs, Microsoft continues to be bedeviled by glitches in its code. The Blaster worm is just the latest in a parade of malicious software that preys on Microsoft's vulnerabilities.

...

Has anyone at Microsoft actually been fired or disciplined as a result of the Blaster debacle? Jeff Jones, senior director for Trustworthy Computing Security, said the responsibility for the flaw was narrowed to a team, and "no one was fired." He would not say if anyone was disciplined.

[link|http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/business/2050991|column]
lincoln
"If you're on your deathbed and you haven't got a story to tell, then you haven't lived. - Asa Baber"
[link|http://users3.ev1.net/~bconnors/resume.htm|VB/SQL resume]
[link|http://users3.ev1.net/~bconnors/tandem_resume.htm|Tandem resume]
[link|mailto:bconnors@ev1.net|contact me]
New I liked this bit
Want to rest easy tonight? Then try not to worry about the fact that new U.S. Department of Homeland Security declared last month it would standardize on Microsoft products.
Darrell Spice, Jr.                      [link|http://www.spiceware.org/cgi-bin/spa.pl?album=./Artistic%20Overpass|Artistic Overpass]\n[link|http://www.spiceware.org/|SpiceWare] - We don't do Windows, it's too much of a chore
New Love this quote:
If you look at the ratio of clued in admins versus those off in happy land reading glossy brochures about the next version, you will see that the shiny happy people are winning the fight, they breed faster. As I mentioned, the fix for Blaster was out for more than three weeks, and MS has come out with fixes, patches and updaters to the point where you get light headed even thinking about them. They all failed.


Replace "admin" with "manager", and they've exactly tagged the putative head of my "organ-i-zation"....

[edit: fixed type on headline]
jb4
Boy I'd like to see those words on a PR banner behind [Treasury Secretary John] Snow at the podium:
Jobs and Growth: Just Wait.

John J. Andrew, unemployed programmer; see jobforjohn.com
Expand Edited by jb4 Aug. 19, 2003, 05:48:26 PM EDT
     Blaster worm articles... - (jbrabeck) - (6)
         That second one is great - (drewk) - (2)
             Something has changed... - (scoenye)
             Nothing is going to change, ever - (deSitter)
         One columnist's musings - (lincoln) - (1)
             I liked this bit - (SpiceWare)
         Love this quote: - (jb4)

I'm a Mog! Half man, half dog -- I'm my own best friend!
45 ms