What worries me the most is that according to the guys holding the presentation there was no reponse from the python team on that issue. Also plone, a web platform based on python, they tested their attack against it and notified the plone guys, didn't implement any countermeasures after being notified.
This was fixed in perl in 2003, it's interesting that the opensource community didn't bother to check the hashtable implementations of all other languages back then. Are they in competition not telling others that something important needs to be fixed? Java devs, chose not to change their hash algo in 2003 BTW because it is a too integral part. Well the modified version is in use for 8 years in perl, might wanna upgrade it this time ;)
Also the fixes PHP 5.4rc (and tomcat, and ...) implemented are just workarounds that were already available before with the suhosin extension for example. Limiting the number of variables you can POST is a wannabe fix, can be circumvented with JSON for example (given that the app uses json_decode() on the receiving end).