hi ya i hear most/some of the anonymous emailers has been taken offline ( donno which ones http://www.linux-sec.net/Hacking/hacking_tools.gwif.html ( bottom of page ) some of the major news servers is now also offline ( too much load ?? ) for checking for viruses ( though not a threat inho ) http://www.linux-sec.net/server.gwif.html#Mail for open relay testing... http://www.linux-sec.net/audit_tools.gwif.html#Relay for other server audits ... see the rest of the site - open port testing, firewal testing, etc i'd guess that carnivore will be ramped up.... and most people wont be complaining about "invasion of privacy" any more ??? ---- i'd guess that somebody didnt tell somebody about any tidbits of info of possible terroist acts... hate to be that somebody or supervisor that said "dont worry about" and went home instead... c ya alvin http://www.Linux-Sec.net -- if you're worried... i'd suggest...its time totighten security on your own servers so that its not hosting or passing info thru your servers On Tue, 11 Sep 2001, Rich Puhek wrote: > Has anyone seen, or does anyone anticipate any security threats on the > Internet or Internet-based attacks on any given targets in connection > with this mornings terroristic attacks on the World Trade Center and the > Pentagon? > > I hadn't considered the possibility, assuming that parties that would > fly planes into buildings aren't likely to be interested in writing > viruses. We did have one customer voluntarily disable their Internet > connection for the next 24-hours out of concern for "viruses". They said > something about a warning from the FBI. The FBI's website is apparantly > unreachable (or overloaded) at the moment. > > --Rich ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- This list is provided by the SecurityFocus ARIS analyzer service. For more information on this free incident handling, management and tracking system please see: http://aris.securityfocus.com
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b30 : Tue Sep 11 2001 - 13:15:17 PDT