Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 9th Jan 2008 22:34 UTC, submitted by vermaden
Privacy, Security, Encryption "Open source code, much like its commercial counterpart, tends to contain one security exposure for every 1000 lines of code, according to a program launched by the Department of Homeland Security to review and tighten up open source code's security. Popular open source projects, such as Samba, the PHP, Perl, and Tcl dynamic languages used to bind together elements of Web sites, and Amanda, the popular open source backup and recovery software running on half a million servers, were all found to have dozens or hundreds of security exposures and quality defects. A total of 7826 open source project defects have been fixed through the Homeland Security review, or one every two hours since it was launched in 2006, according to David Maxwell, open source strategist for Coverity, maker of the source code checking system, the Prevent Software Quality System, that's being used in the review." Note: I just want to state for the record that the headline has not been written by me. I do like the total kicking-in-open-doors air surrounding it, though.
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RE: curiosity
by snowbender on Thu 10th Jan 2008 07:22 UTC in reply to "curiosity"
snowbender
Member since:
2006-05-04

Maybe you can get access to the backup server of a competing company and you can restore files from their backup on your own systems. Or within the same company: you can restore files from other users and read their email like that. Basically: getting access to data you're not supposed to have access to. Or even something else: through a security hole, you succeed in deleting the existing backups on the backup server.

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