Foundstone Shoe On Other Foot
Cimmer writes "One of the premier hack shops (to pun or not to pun) gets busted for unethically ethically hacking.
After filing a lawsuit against former employee JD Glaser for supposedly jacking company source code, Foundstone gets nailed for massive internal software piracy. Tonight's entree: Foot in Mouth."
Corporations who use one legal copy of software to install on all their company machines are doing damage to open-source.
Think about it: If it were impossible for them to just rip-off Windows, Outlook, Office, Ultraedit etc. they would use Linux, Evolution, OpenOffice, Scite/emacs/vi/whatever, since they obviously don't want to spend any money on software.
graspee
How many of you run Winzip without a valid license?
so wait, i'm confused.
we're all happy now that they got busted for piracy(?). they deserve it because they sued some dude who stole their code. but the author says "supposedly" in reference to "jacking company source code". is he implying that no theft occured, and therefore these guys were suing for no reason, and that's why we're on the side of the BSA for today? or are we just taking a stance against software piracy? or does what go around come around?
what does "unethically ethically hacking" mean, anyway? were they white hat hackers using pirated software? and where does the pun on "premier hack shops" come in? they're "hackers" (in the bad sense of the word, even if they did whitehat work) and the story involves "hacking". no wait, it involves software piracy. perhaps they were hacking using a pirated version of adobe premier. i'm not sure how that would work, but then the pun would make sense.
but then, who's foot is in who's mouth? i think it's foundstone. but i haven't seen them say anything that was proven embarrasing as to gain the "foot in mouth" designation. maybe i haven't been following the saga of this company, but the context of the post certainly does not imply any foot-in-mouth action going on.
anyone???
I fail to see how "he is still incarcerated" supports the claim "really knew his shit." One might almost think that, if he really knew his shit, there would be no incarceration to mention.
.@.
"Squeeze Me Macaroni", by Mr. Bungle
I wanna lock Betty Crocker in the kitchen
And knock her upper during supper
Clutter up her butter gutter
Hostess Ding Dong wrapped an eggroll around my wong
While Dolly Madison proceded to ping my pong
Your Milky Way is M'n'M in your britches
And I'll tell you Baby Ruth it looks mighty delicious
Keep blowing my gum, cuz here I come
I'm gonna get you all sticky with my Bubble Yum
Knick knack paddywhack and give your dog a bone, baby
I was givin' some head to some french bread
It was a four course orgy on the spread of my bed
French kissin' french fries in my Fruit of the Looms
I get deeper penetration with a fork and a spoon
I got yogurt meat loaf smeared all over my ass
I stick my weiner in two buns and and then give it the gas
Sour cream from my spleen into Levi jeans
Gonna bust the seams with my refried beans
Ronald McDonald just loves to be fondled
With Big Mac he'll fuck it like a Chicken McNugget
Colonel Sanders wants to goose Granny's loose caboose
He's gonna give her a boost with that Kentucky fried juice
Sooper doop poop scoop, loop de loop, chicken coop
Shoot some hoop, top sirloin from the groin
Topped with dick cheese, sneeze, wheeze,
From the skeez disease, wooi!
Take a dump, baby, squirt some gravy
Pour some sugar on me, honey, make it brown & runny
Give a little Flavor Flav, back from the grave
Gonna burn some toast, pump some humpin' rump roast
Knick knack paddywhack, jump in the sack, in fact
Jerk the smack and crack Jack from the back
Bananarama or ramabanana
Fuckin' Barry Manilow on the Copa Cabana
Squeeze me macaroni, slop your face with my bologna
You gotta syphon the spinach, you gotta cream the corn
Sperm scrambles the eggs and a meal is born
Cookin' like a beginner, but I'm goin' up in her
I had Fritos for lunch I'm havin' bush for dinner
Chef Boyardee and the Three Muskateers
Shove Charleston Chews in their rears like queers
"Holy moly, guacamole!" said my Chips Ahoy
I'm gonna pinch a ravioli on the Pillsbury dough boy
Knick knack paddywhack and give your dog a boner, baby
We came to pottie...we came to pottie down your throat
(-1, Raw and Uncut is the only way to read)
The company I work for is a software house that produces a prominent trading package for stockbrokers.
We're out of compliance on at least the following items:
- Windows NT
- Windows 2000
- Office 97
- Office 2000
- Outlook
- Exceed
- Solaris 8
It's more common than you'd think.
Most hackers who can cover their tracks get caught in a less technical way. Just becuase your a good cracker doesn't mean your a good criminal. There is much more to commiting a crime then the actual execution. Most criminals plan up to and including their crime but rarely what they will do afterwards.
unzip; strip; touch; finger; mount; fsck; more; yes; unmount; sleep
Im actually very suprised at the reaction to this. How many of you have worked for small to mid-size IT related companies that havnt used unlicensed software of some sort. Its somewhat contradictory for a company to cry theft when they are thieves themselves, but then again as the old saying goes there is not honor among thieves. Ive worked for a few, and it doesnt suprise me one bit. Im not in shock or awe by this. And for a company that is one of the formost authorities on computer security to take part in cracking software isnt far fetched and is happening right now by other companies. If its for a proof of concept or for cheating the financial responsibilities. And as far as the accusation that they took the concept of the Extreme Hacking courses for their Ultimate Hacking courses, so what. How many smaller companies were founded by formers of other companies that applied their skills to do their own start-ups. This isnt ground breaking, its business as usual, even if it unethical. The only thing is since this article was pressed by Fortune, quite a bit of financial damage will be done to Foundstone, but thats the risk you take when you attack former employees when partaking in unethical practices.
- Anti-piracy method 1: Spend a lot of time and effort trying to keep ahead of the serial# spreaders and/or crackers, yet still fail pretty miserably, as every other program out there does. Only the honest people actually pay.
- Anti-piracy method 2: Sit back, drink a beer, don't give a rat's ass, and the honest people still pay.
Personally, I think WinZip's got the right idea.Partly, it's the way people act that causes fear.
I guarantee if someone that good acts very professionaly, doens't brag about what they do, and keeps a low profile with regard to their skills, they won't have problems. If you present yourself as a rogue living on the edge, people will not trust you.
An employer will not fire you JUST because you know how to pick a lock, but the fact that you constantly talk about what locks you picked might scare him a little.
Dont trust your employees. Most of them are good, but all it takes are a few nasty ones to come back and bite your ass.
Not to sound like i condone their act, but lets face it every company must be using a few unlicensed software unless ofcourse they are running entirely on open source software. Say you were running a medium sized company and you have a 210 licenses & recently hired 10 new employees , are you going to immediately purchase the license for the 10 others - NO maybe when you get the next budget approval but not immediately.
There are ways to go about this without flagrantly handing over licenses to the employees.
1. Imaging for any upgrades : Ask your employees to backup their personal files on the network & take their disk for imaging. With lot of stuff coming preinstalled on the pc, the employee would hardly take the time to look at what is licensed where.
2. Have a highly trustworthy IT department that does the installations for the staff. This way employees see only the installed APP and not what went into the installation.
I have respect for this guy Jason Glassberg, Foundstone's former software-consulting guru. From the article, this is what he had to say about the litigation:
"This is bullshit,We will regret the day we became a litigious company. You realize you have zero support from the rest of the company on this action, don't you?"
Wonder why he got fired for saying that. Why sue when you know that you are not entirely perfect !?
Siggy Say, Siggy Do
By the way, are "terrorist" cards a method of divination? (thanks for the inspiration dude!)
US Democracy:The best person for the job (among These pre-selected choices...)
This does not bode well for the industry as a whole. Think about how many companies share Foundstone's silhouette - young company, killer app, grows fast from nothing - like netForensics, ISS, et. al.
In my experience as a security analyst, the industry is chock full 'o great products that large companies hesitate to invest in because they're not IBM, Symantec, or the like. Giving 6 digits of cash to a company that could concievably go under in a year is a hard sell on my boss's boss (who signs the contracts) - and with good reason. As a result, we're left with awesome support for products that aren't always the best (IBM), or worse yet, crappy products with no support from a big company (CA).
By doing this, Foundstone has hurt a good chunk of the industry holding some great products, and by association (albeit to a lesser extent) hurt end-users of security apps like me.
akad0nric0
This sentence no verb.
Don't piss people off. No matter how much you think you are right, and how much you think they deserve it. Just don't do it. Would Foundstone have lost it's reputation and been charged with so much piracy if they had just let this guy go, shurgged it off and gotten on with thier lives?
No, nothing would have happened.
The worst thing would have been that, even if this guy really did steal code, they would have a tiny new competitor with no name recognition and no clients. Just another dot-com waiting to fall flat on it's face...
If you go out of your way to not be an asshole, even to people who richly deserve it, you'll find that your life is signifigantly mor etrouble free. Maybe you don't get that two-second moment of childlike glee when you "stick it to them", but then again, is that worth possibly losing the entire company for? Foundstone thinks it is, but I disagree.
From my reading of the article (and other sources on the web with similar info), the thieved software was deleted in April. So an audit conducted on May 2nd, what does that prove? That they were 95% effective in deleting thieved software?