Channel Register

Comments on: Microsoft: Finding flaws on our website is OK

this just in.... 

Posted Monday 21st April 2008 07:03 GMT

Coat

another microsoft spokeshead looks for a new job!

World domination 

Posted Monday 21st April 2008 08:11 GMT

Jobs Horns

Quote: "This is actually really important because online services - that's our stuff"

What? All of it? Including Google's?

Arrogant tossers - they get it from Ballmer, I reckon

Bold move 

Posted Monday 21st April 2008 08:24 GMT

Thumb Up

That's a really bold move, especially considering that in some cases, MS hosts some of its sites on newer versions of servers that have not yet been released to manufacturers. As an example, I recall that xbox.com was running on an unreleased version of MS CMS Server.

@ Skeptical Bastard 

Posted Monday 21st April 2008 08:53 GMT

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Wow you really hate MS. I suppose the next time someone says they make cars you'll jump on them and tell them they don't make all cars.

Get over yourself, go buy a tinfoil hat or something.

I remain skeptical but this looks like a step in the right direction

beware the wolf in sheeps clothing 

Posted Monday 21st April 2008 09:36 GMT

Microsoft agreeing not to sue people.... next they'll be refunding vista users.

Step in the right direction though... just really surprised Microsoft is the first to state this publicly.

Fly-ing low 

Posted Monday 21st April 2008 09:39 GMT

Alert

"The philosophy here is if someone is being nice enough to point out your fly is down, they're really doing you a favor and you should thank them rather than calling the cops and saying you're a pervert."

I'll say. Calling the cops and saying you're a pervert is a bit self-defeating.

@Pete 

Posted Monday 21st April 2008 10:25 GMT

>> "The philosophy here is if someone is being nice enough to point out your fly is

>> down, they're really doing you a favor and you should thank them rather than

>> calling the cops and saying you're a pervert."

>>

>> I'll say. Calling the cops and saying you're a pervert is a bit self-defeating.

Indeed, "they" should be calling the cops and tell them that Ms. Moussouris is a dirty perve running around exposing herself.

On a slightly more serious note, I think it must have been a freudian slip on Ms. Moussouris part because she realised that if anyone is guilty it is the one who is exposing themselves down in public, not the person who was exposed to them.

Good fo MS 

Posted Monday 21st April 2008 12:59 GMT

It's not very often I have good words for Microsoft, but I I think they deserve our praise here. This is a very sensible idea.

"your fly is down" 

Posted Monday 21st April 2008 13:08 GMT

Coat

Dear Microsoft,

Your arse is hanging out the window,

signed,

A. Hacker

P.S.: No, there's no need to thank me...

They just want _someone_ to use their products 

Posted Monday 21st April 2008 15:00 GMT

Linux

I personally just think this is a desperate ploy to keep people using Microsoft services, they don't really care that those users are just whitehats or blackhats trying to find exploits as long as they've paid for the privilege ;)

XYZ 

Posted Monday 21st April 2008 15:18 GMT

Our software has less flies! (Still a steaming pile, though.)

Break the tubes? 

Posted Monday 21st April 2008 15:24 GMT

Paris Hilton

"We basically face a lot of issues that a lot of vendors haven't had to deal with. Not many vendors out there can break the [internet] if they mess up their patches."

OMG OMG OMG. Better start running now, before a security hole in www.microsoft.com breaks tha Intarwub pipes. Seriously, she said that? Paris in disguise I'd say.

Praise where praise is due 

Posted Monday 21st April 2008 20:33 GMT

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It's nice that MS have come clean and implied their online services aren't secure.

Sure, all online services have vulnerabilities but where's the dividing line between an ethical hacker / researcher and someone who's looking for that vulnerability that their next trojan can exploit? How does this stack up against the Computer Misuse Act in a court of English Law?

I give them a big thumbs up though and wished others would follow suit. More people should take notice of what's posted daily on the xssed.com site too.

I'm pink from all the tickling. 

Posted Monday 21st April 2008 21:10 GMT

Happy

I'm delighted. I've been scratching my head and others' heads about this this Web research/ disclosure law thing ever since Daniel Cuthbert's conviction in 2005. It's nice to see some progress being made.

Has anyone seen Microsoft's actual policy in writing, though? Is it on MS's site somewhere?

It's all well and good to say "we won't sue you," but I'm sure MS's legal machine won't have allowed itself to write a policy that would weaken the company's case in court in the event that they DO decide to sue you.

Not the only ones 

Posted Monday 21st April 2008 21:14 GMT

Paris Hilton

Not the only ones , with all the new lock downs and security updates for the better class of the superior web 2.0 browsers , a number of web sites are actively reliant browser insecurity flaws of IE6/7 to work

eg try http:// www.windowsmedia.com/mediaguide/radio with FF 2.0.0.14 running no script and see how far you get when you click on "more ...... stations" unless you invoke the IETab option even then the results can be very indifferent !

could this be ?? 

Posted Monday 21st April 2008 22:44 GMT

A change of a corporate philosophy ??

Complaint brought by Mr. Schwartz's client, the Intel Corporation 

Posted Tuesday 22nd April 2008 05:17 GMT

So, who's ready to be anchored to the eighth ring of Hell for 12 years? Well, speak up!

http://www.lightlink.com/spacenka/fors/

they could break the internet 

Posted Tuesday 22nd April 2008 05:21 GMT

"OMG OMG OMG. Better start running now, before a security hole in www.microsoft.com breaks tha Intarwub pipes. Seriously, she said that? Paris in disguise I'd say."

If you don't believe that if a ms automatic patch sent to every XP & vista box that accidentally flood pinged their default router wouldn't pretty much break the internet for everybody... you would be very wrong.

I'm not a ms lover, but I'm not blinded by anger either. I truly believe a bad patch could DDOS the net on a scale so massive, that the internet would have to be fractured into bits and pieces to try and get it going again. overwelm all the routers on pretty much all networks simultaneously... running mac/linux/*bsd won't help you.

Breaking the tubes 

Posted Tuesday 22nd April 2008 07:37 GMT

Coat

"We basically face a lot of issues that a lot of vendors haven't had to deal with. Not many vendors out there can break the [internet] if they mess up their patches."

So Microsoft are patching the internet now are they. Well, that explains why it seems to have gotten slower over time. I think it needs a reboot. Next time you pass Internet Central can you hit the reboot key?

Mines the slow tubular one with the patches.

Where are teh h8ters? 

Posted Tuesday 22nd April 2008 11:37 GMT

Stop

I love it that if we all sat down and said "If company X did this it would be good" but when Microsoft do it, all of a sudden everyone is desperate to find holes in the semantics of it. "break teh internet lolz" "But, but, they're micro$haft...they...they..splutter. etc..can you see what I did by subsituting the "S" for a dollar sign" ad fucking nauseaum

The Mac boys are a bit quiet here as well. Come on, hasn't Apple got an even shinier policy here which you could crow about or is it that their legal threats are so big they wouldn't fit in an internal mail envelope?

@Charles Calthrop 

Posted Tuesday 22nd April 2008 14:36 GMT

Go

Na, the standard httpd with the Mac server is Apache, which is open-source anyway - kinda defeats all the excitement of trying to break it.

they could break the internet 

Posted Tuesday 22nd April 2008 16:28 GMT

Coat

from a good TV Show :)

If you Type Google in To Google you can break the internet

i wonder if that works with MS

........ goes off to type Microsoft in to Microsoft webiste and see if the internet or Microsoft dies :)

Break the Intarwub indeed (@AC) 

Posted Friday 25th April 2008 01:22 GMT

Gates Horns

"If you don't believe that if a ms automatic patch sent to every XP & vista box that accidentally flood pinged their default router wouldn't pretty much break the internet for everybody... you would be very wrong."

I must be very wrong then. The good old "ping of death" approach would only prevent the incriminated box from accessing the Intarwub tubes, not break them, provided your sysadmin desserves his salary. You might also want to consider that she was supposed to talk about vulns in MS own websites... Paris H she is!

"I'm not a ms lover, but I'm not blinded by anger either."

I'm not a ms lover at all, but I'm not angry (nor blind). Just a tad sarcastic.

"I truly believe a bad patch could DDOS the net on a scale so massive, that the internet would have to be fractured into bits and pieces to try and get it going again. overwelm all the routers on pretty much all networks simultaneously... running mac/linux/*bsd won't help you."

Actually it would take much more than a genuine error in a patch to DDOS the whole net (not to mention how stupid "DDOS the net" sounds. Let's admit it was a shortcut). Especially considering the way MS patches are released these times. And running "mac/linux/*bsd" would prevent me from being blocked at the router level -if not genuinely at the DHCP server level- by my sysadmin (who happens to be me anyway). Now we need a version of l3dgeworld specifically flagging the MS machines. Bring it on!

h8ters - @ Charles H 

Posted Friday 25th April 2008 01:39 GMT

Paris Hilton

Steve Ballmer is not allowed to fart, because it would destroy earth, hm? Mind you, his chair-throwing activities didn't cause a major earthshake. A hole in MS websites won't disrupt anything appart from the fanbuoys trust (and even that is unlikely, they'll find a good excuse). I spent whole nights shouting "bloody Steve" at my mirror, he didn't show up tu gut me. Sure, the whole world relies on MS patches for its stability. See how things went in Iraq because MS failed to release Vista SP1 on time! Also, Katrina was caused by a security hole in WinXP (which -thank Dog- has been patched before the world was destroyed)!

Now let's have a look at facts: The world is overwhelmed by spam and DDOS attacks due to security holes in various versions of Windows (does "botnet" ring a bell?). I strongly doubt that MS could make things worst without actively trying. The Intarwub is still working though. Kinda.

footnote 

Posted Friday 25th April 2008 01:48 GMT

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The w3 parser found 26 HTML errors on www.microsoft.com. Surely it's a flaw that I should report. Especially as MS is part of the w3 consortium.

erratum -ping o'death 

Posted Friday 25th April 2008 02:20 GMT

It seems I typed something like:

"The good old "ping of death" approach would only prevent the incriminated box from accessing the Intarwub tubes, not break them"

as an answer to AC who said that flood-pinging the router would disrupt the intarwub. That's actually not quite true. Sorry. The HTTP traffic for the incriminated machine will not be blocked (not automatically, not with my settings, that is). Still, the intarwub tubes won't be affected.