RE: Comment on DMCA, Security, and Vuln Reporting

From: Wolf, Glenn (glenn.wolf@we-inc.com)
Date: Wed Jul 31 2002 - 12:34:23 PDT

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    In light of the fact that 2600 was successfully sued over merely linking to
    DeCSS source code under the DMCA (and losing a subsequent appeal), and
    especially since News.com mentioned that fact in their article, I'm
    absolutely AMAZED that they would do just that, linking directly to exploit
    code in three separate places in the article!!!  Oh, and HP is apparently a
    corporate sponsor of News.com (by the ad banners that pop up on their site).
    I wonder how THIS will play out...
    
    Glenn
    
    
    -----Original Message-----
    From: Richard Forno [mailto:rfornoat_private]
    Sent: Wednesday, July 31, 2002 6:28 AM
    To: bugtraqat_private
    Cc: vuln-devat_private; johnmacsgroupat_private
    Subject: Comment on DMCA, Security, and Vuln Reporting
    
    
    Given the recent news about HP using DMCA to shutter a Bugtraq disclosure of
    Tru64 vulnerability, I felt it appropriate to chime in. I hope you find my
    comments of-value and worthy of relaying onto the list.
    
    The News.Com story with more details is at :
    http://news.com.com/2100-1023-947325.html?tag=fd_lede
    
    ----------RFF Comments
    I find it sadly amusing that technology companies see "security debate" on
    the same level as "piracy" or "copyright controls." What it really serves as
    is a corporate secrecy tool and (as was said) cudgel against any and all
    potential enemies.
    
    HP, in its infinite corporate and legal wisdom  - the same wisdom shared by
    Ken Lay, Jeff Skilling, Fritz "Hollywood" Holings, and Bernie Ebbers - has
    opened a Pandora's Box here. Next you'll see folks saying that public
    disclosure of the generic password on the default Unix "guest" account will
    be prosecutable under DMCA, or that a given exploit uses a "buffer overflow"
    to cause its damage is likewise criminal to speak of. It's bad enough that
    black markers might become illegal, isn't it? But the madness continues.
    
    While I disagree with Adobe's use of DMCA last year against Dmitry, at least
    their claim was somehow - admitted tangentally - related to copyright
    protection. HP's case is just absurd and has nothing to do with copyrights
    and everything to do with avoiding embarassment and taking responsibility
    for their product's shortcomings.
    
    I believe system-level security is MUTUALLY-EXCLUSIVE from copyright
    protection  -- or more accurately, the 'economic security' of the vendors.
    Taking reasonable steps - including public disclosure of exploits and their
    code - to protect a user's system from unauthorized compromise IN NO WAY
    impacts the copyright rights of HP, unless HP wrote the exploit code that's
    being publicly shared w/o permission....in which case it's truly their fault
    then. Regardless, either way you look at it, they're using DMCA to conceal
    their embarassment and duck responsibility.
    
    The way we're going, thanks to HP's legal geniuses, we may as well call
    NIST, NSA, SANS, and IETF to rewrite a new 'industry standard' definition
    for 'computer security' that places the vendor's profit and public image
    above the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of end-user data and
    systems. For all intents and purposes, Congress has already done that with
    DMCA and Berman's proposed "Hollywood Hacking" Bill -- they just forgot to
    inform (or seek counsel from) those of us working in the real information
    security community.
    
    Bleeping idiots. Congress and Corporate America. When it comes to technology
    policy, neither has the first clue . No wonder we're in the state we're in.
    
    rick
    infowarrior.org
    



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