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Re: Vulnerabilites in new laws on computer hacking

Subject: Re: Vulnerabilites in new laws on computer hacking
Date: Wed, 22 Feb 2006 10:16:15 +0100

However, there is one hole here. Under the "hack your own machines"
policy, certain large/expensive systems (mainframes) are too expensive
for basement hackers to acquire. Thus they go largely unexamined. This
is a 2-edged sword:

   * reduced expense for the vendor because of a lot less "bug of the
     week" patching
   * increased risk for system owners vs. *professional* intruders;
     because the script kiddies are not attacking these platforms, it
     is a "target rich environment" for professional,
     financially-motivated attackers

Unless, of course, these large systems run a standard operating
system and not some Dinosaur holdout OS.

This is an example of the hole. The proper thing for the defender to do
would be to put up a test system with fake accounts and invite attack
against the test system. If the site operator chooses not to do so, then
it is at the expense of their customer's risk. But under no
circumstances is it proper for researchers to deliberately hack
production servers that they do not own.

With production servers I take it you mean "any system" as figuring
out what a system does is rather difficult.

Casper

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