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Submission + - Sourceforge Hijacks the Nmap Sourceforge Account (seclists.org) 2

vivaoporto writes: Gordon Lyon (better known as Fyodor, author of nmap and maintainer of the internet security resource sites insecure.org, nmap.org, seclists.org, and sectools.org) warns on the nmap development mailing list that the Sourceforge Nmap account was hijacked from him.

According to him the old Nmap project page (located at http://sourceforge.net/projects/nmap/, screenshot) was changed to a blank page and its contents were moved to a new page (http://sourceforge.net/projects/nmap.mirror/, screenshot) which controlled by sf-editor1 and sf-editor3, in pattern mirroring the much discussed the takeover of GIMP-Win page discussed last week on Ars Technica, IT World and eventually this week Slashdot.

That happens after Sourceforge promises to stop "presenting third party offers for unmaintained SourceForge projects. At this time, we present third party offers only with a few projects where it is explicitly approved by the project developer, or if the project is already bundling third party offers."

To their credit Fyodor states that "So far they seem to be providing just the official Nmap files (as long as you don't click on the fake download buttons) and we haven't caught them trojaning Nmap the way they did with GIMP" but reiterates "that you should only download Nmap from our official SSL Nmap site: https://nmap.org/download.html"

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Sourceforge Hijacks the Nmap Sourceforge Account

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  • yeah, explicitly approved by the project developer. Or explicitly disapproved by the project developer (since they were disgusted by our business practices and left).
    • please confirm what you are trying to say here.

      are you saying that DICE will interpret "leaving in disgust" as clear disapproval of DICE junk habits, and will NOT, in future, add contraband to these projects?

      please say this is true.

      now say "DICE will not adulterate abandoned projects, ever, unless given EXPLICIT PERMISSION to so".

      thank you, have a nice day.

We all agree on the necessity of compromise. We just can't agree on when it's necessary to compromise. -- Larry Wall

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