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Microsoft: Finding flaws on our website is OK
( 227 days 16 hours ago)
LinuxSecurity.com: In a first for a major company, Microsoft has publicly pledged not to sue or press charges against ethical hackers who responsibly find security flaws in its online services.
The promise, extended Saturday at the ToorCon security conference in Seattle, is a bold and significant move. While researchers are generally free to attack legally acquired software running on their own hardware, they can face severe penalties for probing websites that run on servers belonging to others. In some cases, organizations have pursued legal action against researchers who did nothing more than discover and responsibly report serious online vulnerabilities.
The promise, extended Saturday at the ToorCon security conference in Seattle, is a bold and significant move. While researchers are generally free to attack legally acquired software running on their own hardware, they can face severe penalties for probing websites that run on servers belonging to others. In some cases, organizations have pursued legal action against researchers who did nothing more than discover and responsibly report serious online vulnerabilities.
Sudo Voodoo
( 227 days 16 hours ago)
LinuxSecurity.com: A Linux system has two kinds of users: ordinary users and the root user. Each ordinary user has a robust set of permissions to manage his or her own files (and files that belong to a group that he or she is a member of), but an ordinary user cannot affect system configuration, start or stop essential services such as the SSH daemon, and cannot reserve a so-called privileged port, or any networking port numbered less than 1,024. The root user, though, is free to access and modify any file, perform any task, and affect the system at will. We have all used sudo some point in using Linux but do you know the importance of sudo to Linux security? This article guides the user through everything a Linux user needs to know about sudo.






