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Security

Laws Threaten Web Security Researchers 42

ancientribe writes "A new report from a Computer Security Institute (CSI) working group of Web researchers, computer crime law experts, and U.S. Department of Justice agents explores the effects of laws that might hinder Web vulnerability research. The report, which the group will present on Monday at CSI's NetSec conference, has some chilling findings about how fear of prosecution is muzzling some Web researchers from disclosing to Website operators security holes they find. The bad news is the laws may inadvertently hurt the ethical researchers and help the bad guys."
Space

Ancient Star Found, Estimated at 13.2 Billion Years Old 377

raguirre writes "An article on Physorg.org reports that a newly found star may be as old as the universe itself. Recent studies have concluded that the Big Bang occurred somewhere in the neighborhood of 13.7 Billion years ago. The star, a heavy-elements laden fossil labeled HE 1523-0901 on charts was probably born right around the same time; approximately 13.2 Billion years ago. 'Today, astronomer Anna Frebel of the the University of Texas at Austin McDonald Observatory and her colleagues have deduced the star's age based on the amounts of radioactive elements it contains compared to certain other "anchor" elements, specifically europium, osmium and iridium.'"
Power

Wireless Power Now A Reality 197

SlashRating©
35
slashdottit! tm
CSMastermind writes "CNN is reporting on a breakthrough technology. A startup called Powercast has developed and patented a device, the size of a dime and costing 5$ to make, which allows power to be transmitted wirelessly. The device has already gained FCC approval and the company has inked deals with the likes of Phillips. From the article: 'Powercast says it has signed nondisclosure agreements to develop products with more than 100 companies, including major manufacturers of cell phones, MP3 players, automotive parts, temperature sensors, hearing aids, and medical implants. The last of those alone could be a multibillion-dollar market: Pacemakers, defibrillators, and the like require surgery to replace dead batteries. But with a built-in Powercast receiver, those batteries could last a lifetime. '"

New Tolkien Book Released 'The Children of Hurin' 260

Zoolander writes "Christopher Tolkien has completed the last book of J.R.R. Tolkien from notes left from his father." The ultimate question is how much of a quality difference will there be; for instance the difference between Dune and Dune: House Atriedes is a pretty big gap. But in my experience, Christopher Tolkien has always taken a good, cautious approach when it comes to his father's work so here's to hoping.
Windows

Surprise, Windows Listed as Most Secure OS 499

david_g17 writes "According to a Symantec study reported by Information Week, Microsoft has the most secure operating system amongst its commercial competitors. The report only covered the last 6 months of vulnerabilities and patch releases, but the results place Microsoft operating systems above Mac OS X and Red Hat. According to the article, 'The report found that Microsoft Windows had the fewest number of patches and the shortest average patch development time of the five operating systems it monitored in the last six months of 2006.' The article continues to mention the metrics used in the study (quantity and severity of vulnerabilities as well as the amount of time one must wait for the patch to be released)."
GNOME

Gnome 2.18 Released 253

xdancergirlx writes "Gnome 2.18 was released today (on time as usual). Detailed release notes are available. Nothing revolutionary in this release but definitely some nice new features, bug fixes, and improvements."
Security

Submission + - OpenBSD's second remote exploit in ten years

numatrix writes: "For only the second (public) time in 10 years, OpenBSD has a remotely exploitable vulnerability. To be fair, it's limited in scope unless you're running on a native IPv6 network, but still a serious exposure. Also worth noting, it looks like there were a few problems in the responsible-disclosure practices."
Operating Systems

Submission + - New default install vulnerability in OpenBSD

tlhIngan writes: "OpenBSD has now been hit with a second remotely exploitable hole. This hole affects the default installation of OpenBSD, and all users are encouraged to update. This vulnerability exploits a memory corruption bug in the IPv6 stack which can lead to remote execution and bypassing of OpenBSD's normally tight security controls. Users are advised to update their systems immediately, or filter IPv6 packets at the firewall."
Operating Systems

Submission + - Parallelize applications for faster Linux booting

An anonymous reader writes: A common complaint about GNU/Linux is the amount of time the operating system takes to start. There are several independent tasks involved to evolve from a cold Linux system to one that you can interact with through a shell or window manager. This article takes you through all major stages of Linux boot and initialization.
Linux Business

Submission + - Pushing a Linux build across a network

tiredofnick writes: Do any slashdotters know of a method to push out a Linux build across a network? I work for a college and I am thinking of pushing for an all Linux computer lab. One thing I need to know before I present my arguments for such a lab is if there is a solution for pushing out a Linux image across the network to a lab full of computers. Does anyone know of any such solution?
Security

Submission + - Are firewalls okay at a creative workplace?

No-Tec writes: "I'm part of a rapidly growing company that recently instituted a company wide and very strict firewall. We are employing 100+ now including accounting, sales, marketing, etc, so I do agree that it was imperative to implement some sort of outgoing restrictions. Problem is, the firewall has extinguished all of our [marketing] creative outlets: in-browser flash, streaming music, most video formats, etc. Disregarding the obvious drop of moral, do you think restricting the creative department is counter-productive to our positions or do you think it's justified in what they are doing? I'm interested in what the designers and IT'ers on /. think about this. I'm sure the designers can chime in and agree that we need a little more leeway to do our job effectively."
Security

Submission + - OpenBSD's IPv6 mbufs remote kernel buffer overflow

An anonymous reader writes: Well, the counter on www.openbsd.org now says two remote holes in more than ten years. This is due to a corruption of mbuf chains when given specially crafted IPv6 packets. This is only exploitable from the local network, but wireless nodes are local, right? A fix is available in the usual place.

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