Wired.com: So Many Holes, So Few Hacks

From: Richard M. Smith (rmsat_private)
Date: Mon Dec 30 2002 - 07:15:28 PST

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    So Many Holes, So Few Hacks  By Michelle Delio 
    http://www.wired.com/news/infostructure/0,1377,56955,00.html
    
    Experts who discover and report security holes seem to be far more
    industrious than the malicious hackers willing or able to exploit those
    holes. 
    
    Despite the thousands of hackable holes that lurk in e-mail, on
    websites, in files and operating systems, most users' computers are
    never afflicted with more than the virtual version of a sniffle. 
    
    Few of the ominous potential traumas reported in 2002 turned out to have
    any real impact on most computer users. The Klez virus infected some
    machines and spawned spam that continues to clutter many e-mail inboxes.
    And the Linux Slapper worm made more work for some systems
    administrators for a while. 
    
    The rest of 2002's reported security holes appear to have languished,
    unexploited. 
    
    Some security experts suggest that malicious code attacks do happen but
    are dismissed by most users as just another wonky Windows software
    crash. But those same experts also cheerfully confess that most exploits
    aren't all that exploitable, and that the security industry profits by
    stirring up fear and frenzy. 
    
    Experts also wonder whether they and their colleagues devote entirely
    too much time to pouring over program code looking for possible
    exploits. 
    
    .....
    



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