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Submission + - Theo de Raadt gives a 10-year summary on exploit mitigation in OpenBSD

ConstantineM writes: Microsoft has all significant exploit mitigation techniques fully integrated and enabled, claims Theo de Raadt at Yandex ruBSD, whilst giving a 10-year summary of the methods employed by OpenBSD. In year 2000, OpenBSD started a development initiative to intentionally make the memory environment of a process less predictable and less robust, without impacting the well-behaved programs. Concepts like the random stack gap, W^X, ASLR and PIE are explained. Some of them, like the random stack gap, are implemented with a 3-line change to the kernel, yet it appears that some other vendors are still shipping without it.

Submission + - fuse support in OpenBSD -current

ConstantineM writes: File system in userland support — fuse — was included in OpenBSD 5.4 source tree, but not built by default, hence not officially supported. This has since changed in 5.4-current. The undeadly editors have tracked down the author, Sylvestre Gallon, and asked him about his experience of getting libfuse into OpenBSD. Which userland file systems are supported? So far, it's sshfs-fuse and ntfs-3g (both are in the ports tree due to the GPL).

Comment Re:I am not worried about it (Score 1) 1367

I question how any sentient being can ignore the fact that the world has to be different because man is here. If we were not here our bodies would not be consuming resources, making heat islands, and in general generating heat from simply existing and using resources.

Not to mention using those resources we are eliminating the earths cooling sinks.

Whether that will cause long term issues is something we have to wait and see. Fact is... we are here using energy generating the by product of heat.

As to CO2 ... symptom of our existence... maybe contributor to the heat.

Businesses

Submission + - 8 Years For IP Theft

nick_davison writes: So you though a several thousand dollar settlement is harsh for copying and distributing some music? The BBC reports that Joya Williams, 42, from Atlanta has just been sentenced to 8 years in jail for copying and trying to distribute a recipe — in this case, Coca Cola's. District Judge J Owen Forrester said in sentencing, "This is the kind of offence that cannot be tolerated in our society."

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