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RE: Pentester convicted..

Subject: RE: Pentester convicted..
Date: Fri, 12 May 2006 11:28:55 -0400 (EDT)

Bret McDaniel didn't scan a single machine. He'd discovered a security hole in the company's (Tornado, IIRC) software and wrote a two line patch while working FOR that company. He'd brought the problem and the patch to the attention of the company, and they refused to apply the patch or even let their customers know that they were all vulnerable.


He sent emails to the company's customers (not just some random 3rd party or news media source) telling them about the security issue, and _how to fix it_. I'd imagine a few of them were just a little pissed off that the company had known about everything for over a year and had kept quiet.

Now when he sent these emails, he was no longer employed by the company, AND he'd sent them through the company's mail server (~14k emails.) Because the server was poorly configured/administered, the thousands of messages ramped the load avg through the roof and hosed the box.

-k

On Thu, 11 May 2006, Craig Wright wrote:


First - Get a clue.
<snip>

Bret McDanel The other mentioned 1030 case also broke the law - Plain and simple. You have no right to scan sites for the hell of it. This is illegal, unprofessional and plain stupid!

Regards,
Craig


-----Original Message----- From: William Hancock [mailto:bill.hancock@isthmusgroup.com] Sent: Thursday, 11 May 2006 12:20 AM To: pen-test@securityfocus.com Subject: Pentester convicted..

Hey there pen-testers, take this with a grain of salt, it just got me
excited.  I am really interested in everyones opinion on the matter or
corporate responsibility and ownership.

<RANT>
In an article posted to slashdot today
(http://it.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/05/10/112259&from=rss) a man
has been convicted of hacking when he casually and helpfully reported a
security vulnerability to the owners of a web site, in this case The
University of Southern California.  It reads like it was some sort of
simple SQL injection and upon gleaning the information he reported it.

What are we to do as a community I ask?  We should we, the good guys,
who are paid for our knowledge and ability to exploit mistakes,
oversights, and weaknesses then professionally report them to aid in the
securing of information capital (or anyone who reports the flaw for that
matter) worry about prosecution.  It lends itself to a forcing the
technical community to sit on their laurels and wait for the people who
don't report issues to exploit them.  Further it sounds very clear that
had he not notified them, they would have never known.

A security pro notices a flaw, checks to make sure he is not on crack by
'flipping a bit', deems the threat viable and is likely to be exploited,
notifies the owners, then get arrested and charged with unauthorized
access.  We, as a or even The security community, should push
corporations, governments, and organized body's to take responsibility
and ownership of their problems.  If they publish a site that is flawed
or exposing information then they are authorizing the retrieval of that
information.  I'm not advocating that they laws should allow any jerk to
try and brute his or her way in to a public or private web site, but
come on.

If someone leaves their wallet in the park with no guard or protection,
I pick it up and bring it back to the owner, the owner didn't want me to
have it but I brought it back to him.  Why in the hell should I have to
go to jail for returning it to him, why should I/we be punished for
doing the right thing?

I acknowledge this to be a rant but there must but some way to insist
that when people make something available to the public that it is their
responsibility to safeguard it and appreciate not persecute someone who
let's them know (for free I might add) that a weakness exists.  This is
simple scapegoating, the University did something not advisable as a
good practice and instead of owning up to it they villafied a
professional pen-tester for offering valid advice.

</RANT>


Thanks, Bill



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