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DirectX Flaw Leaves Windows Vulnerable

cryonic*angel writes "Just when you thought it was safe to start buying music from BuyMusic, another another Windows security flaw is found, in DirectX this time, that basically affects every possible windows configuration that is still supported. I wonder, will they indemnify me for this?"

530 comments

  1. patch me up baby! by Neophytus · · Score: 5, Informative

    Direct download for 9.0b (not for nt4.0). Strangely it isn't on the main directx page yet considering the critical nature of the problem. Here is the technet article with patches for existing directx versions.

    1. Re:patch me up baby! by Krilomir · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I'm quite sure there is a patch up already on windows update. My computer was patched just hours ago. I really don't see anything special about this story. What's so special about this flaw?

    2. Re:patch me up baby! by Neophytus · · Score: 1

      A big flaw with windows update is that you have to get the whone 11mb per computer. Thats why I was linking to the redist version. And its special because its attracting so much widespread attention. Perhaps the group released a press release to msnbc and the bbc ;)

    3. Re:patch me up baby! by macrom · · Score: 1

      I just logged on. Windows Update popped up and presented the DirecX flaw update, and it wasn't 11MB. I don't know the exact size, but it downloaded and installed in under a minute or two.

    4. Re:patch me up baby! by GammaTau · · Score: 5, Funny

      Well, you know what they say about downloading and applying Windows patches...

      "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."

    5. Re:patch me up baby! by Neophytus · · Score: 1

      my bad then. directx 9.0b is around 11mb, though

    6. Re:patch me up baby! by BigBir3d · · Score: 4, Informative

      9.0b has been available since Wednesday 7/23, that I know of. That is when I had to manually update the dozen or so machines in my office.

    7. Re:patch me up baby! by Chester+K · · Score: 5, Funny

      I'm quite sure there is a patch up already on windows update. My computer was patched just hours ago. I really don't see anything special about this story. What's so special about this flaw?

      It's a Microsoft bug, it doesn't matter how important it is. You're supposed to be foaming at the mouth and making sweeping statements about how this proves open source is better! Don't you know what website you're on?

      --

      NO CARRIER
    8. Re:patch me up baby! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are a troll.

    9. Re:patch me up baby! by Knightmare · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I can't decide if this is a troll or not. How is this a big vulnerability? Well, take a second and think how easy it is to be exposed to a midi file compared to an executable in an email or a malformed packet on one of Windows many default listening ports.

      Newer versions of outlook and many mail servers can block .exe,.src,.com,etc... extensions from ever making it to your double click happy hand.

      A $35 personal firewall from your local computer store can protect you from port based attacks.

      But when was the last time you saw security software/hardware that blocked midi files? An exploit of this in the wild would mean any webpage, any HTML email, any midi file download would be an attack vector. How is this a small problem?

    10. Re:patch me up baby! by goosman · · Score: 1

      The update on my win2k machine was 948k.

    11. Re:patch me up baby! by merdark · · Score: 1

      I was patched yesterday in fact. Automatically I might add (with confirmation from me of course).

    12. Re:patch me up baby! by xanadu-xtroot.com · · Score: 1

      On my XP laptop, it's 948k for the PATCH. I don't really know how big teh full blown DX9b package is, though.

      --
      I'm not a prophet or a stone-age man,
      I'm just a mortal with potential of a super man.
    13. Re:patch me up baby! by Realistic_Dragon · · Score: 4, Funny
      Don't you know what website you're on?

      Microsoft Security Bulletin MS03-035

      Flaw in Internet Explorer Could Cause Website Name Not To Appear (823803)

      Originally posted: July 23, 2003

      Summary

      Who should read this bulletin: All users of Microsoft® Windows®

      Impact of vulnerability: User may become disorientated on the internet

      Maximum Severity Rating: Moderate

      Recommendation: Administrators of Windows computers should consider applying the update patch.

      Affected Software:

      * Microsoft Windows NT 4.0 Server

      * Microsoft Windows NT 4.0 Terminal Server Edition

      * Microsoft Windows 2000

      * Microsoft Windows XP

      * Microsoft Windows Server 2003

      Technical details

      Technical description:

      A flaw exists in all versions of Internet Explorer that could cause the name of the website being visited not to be displayed.
      --
      Beep beep.
    14. Re:patch me up baby! by saden1 · · Score: 0, Funny

      Every week there's a venerability announced. What do you expect people to say? MS is certainly not good at keeping software secure so why shouldn't people complain and foam at the mouth? IMO MS deserves every bit of the criticism it gets.

      And for the record, if you don't criticize nothing gets done/fixed.

      --

      -----
      One is born into aristocracy, but mediocrity can only be achieved through hard work.
    15. Re:patch me up baby! by Entropius · · Score: 5, Insightful

      While /. has been known to indulge in a little over-the-top microsoft bashing when bugs like these come out, there's a reason they (especially ones like this) make the front page.

      Windows has a huge installed base, and windows machines tend to be targeted by kiddies looking for DDoS zombies.

      And of course this is a big bug. Run arbitrary code through a midi file? That's huge, and deserves to be on the front page. Apache security holes of much less import make the front page, and they probably belong there too.

    16. Re:patch me up baby! by FatherOfONe · · Score: 5, Funny

      Man how true it is. I can't believe all the people here that bash Microsoft for their apparent lack of security. I mean whats the problem with checking for patches for your server every hour or so? Even if some of the patches are so bad they crash apps on your server and prevent others from starting. I mean, what is the big deal?

      Hang on a second... it has been 30 seconds since I last checked Microsoft for another security update...

      Ok, I now have another 90MB file I need to apply to the 200 NT boxes I have.... Like I was saying what the heck is the big deal? So what that most vendors release stuff on NT boxes that requires certain service packs, and won't work with others? Yeah this makes server consoldation impossible but who really cares? It isn't that big of a deal, just buy another box. Heck we plan on buying another hundred or so this year.

      Hang on a second it has been another 5 min since my last check at Microsoft for another update...

      Wow only two new updates! This is a first! Now, as I was saying, these open source "Quality is important" types are just zealots. They just don't understand that it isn't that big of a deal to support Windows.

      Sorry, hang on a second... a new Worm just hit or email server...

      Now where was I? Oh yeah, the advantages of running Windows... You have one consistant platform. Well we will when we finally get our 200 NT boxes upgraded to Win2k server. Dag gone it, I have to go and talk to our Microsoft rep again... be back in 15 min...

      Ok I just found out that Windows 2003 server is out now and EVERYONE is going to it. The nice thing is that Microsoft will let us keep running our Win2k servers until the end of the year! Yeah I would like to see what you open source people say about that! See Microsoft isn't bad at all. They even told us that we could run 2003 Server for a full 3 years! Man that will make life great!

      So let all the bitching begin about Microsoft over one SMALL bug! They just don't know what they are talking about...

      --
      The more I learn about science, the more my faith in God increases.
    17. Re:patch me up baby! by ssimpson · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What's so special about this flaw?

      Are you brainwashed by how many flaws like this we see? This allows a malicious adversary to craft a web page (for IE) or e-mail (for OE / Outlook) that would allow the adversary to execute arbitrary programs in that users context.

      The point isn't that an update is out already, it's that there will remain god knows how many tens of millions of computer vulnerable to this flaw for a long time. Not only will those machines be hacked and taken down, but someone will most likely produce and exploit that turns the machines into a DDoS client, or an SMTP relay for spam, or...You get the idea. In the end it pisses over the rest of the Internet community.

      And it's all thanks to shite security engineering in MS and non-conformance to standards (the MIDI playing is caused by a non-W3c HTML tag "BGSOUND").

      --
      "Mary had a crypto key, she kept it in escrow, and everything that Mary said, the Feds were sure to know."
    18. Re:patch me up baby! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      User may become disorientated on the internet

      What are they on about? Most users are disorientated on the internet.

    19. Re:patch me up baby! by srmalloy · · Score: 1
      Direct download for 9.0b (not for nt4.0).

      The Microsoft link for the download is for the web-install version of 9.0b; you have to be connected to the Net to install it. I did some searching, and I found a download site for the redistributable full download of DirectX 9.0b here; it's a 32.6 Mb download, but you can put it on a CD or a fileserver, and you won't have everybody at your site pounding your Net connection to hit Microsoft for the pieces they need.
    20. Re:patch me up baby! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Given the parent string of MS astroturfing, it must be Slashdot.

    21. Re:patch me up baby! by spydir31 · · Score: 1

      It's because the bug isn't in DirectX, but in the windows MIDI decoder, according to eEye
      Read the Advisory

    22. Re:patch me up baby! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I mean whats the problem with checking for patches for your server every hour or so?

      This bug affects the playing of MIDI files. Why are you using your server to play multimedia?

    23. Re:patch me up baby! by HTH+NE1 · · Score: 1

      At first, I thought I'd be safe since I still haven't installed 9.0a from Windows Update. Then I read the article:

      THE FLAW IS unusually widespread, affecting all versions of DirectX from version 5.2 to the current 9.0a running on all versions of Windows from Windows 98 through the new Windows Server 2003, according to the Microsoft bulletin.

      Though I don't listen that much to MIDI files, malformed or otherwise, I guess I should update. I just hope it doesn't break my games.

      --
      Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner entwine / The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine?
    24. Re:patch me up baby! by drunk_as_in_beer · · Score: 5, Funny

      What's so special about this flaw?

      What's so special is you actually *don't* have to reboot after applying the patch.

      --
      --Drunk as in Beer
    25. Re:patch me up baby! by FroMan · · Score: 0

      Hang on a second... it has been 30 seconds since I last checked Microsoft for another security update...

      [snip ~430 characters]

      Hang on a second it has been another 5 min since my last check at Microsoft for another update...

      Man, you really need some typing classes. If too you 5 minutes to type that one paragraph?

      --
      Norris/Palin 2012
      Fact: We deserve leaders who can kick your ass and field dress your carcass.
    26. Re:patch me up baby! by FroMan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Where do you work that you get to play games?

      Or is there some other purpose for DX?

      --
      Norris/Palin 2012
      Fact: We deserve leaders who can kick your ass and field dress your carcass.
    27. Re:patch me up baby! by sharkey · · Score: 1
      Man, you really need some typing classes. If too you 5 minutes to type that one paragraph?

      Man, you really need a better translator. All your base?

      --

      --
      "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
    28. Re:patch me up baby! by ncc74656 · · Score: 2, Informative
      A big flaw with windows update is that you have to get the whone 11mb per computer.

      Put an HTTP proxy server between your LAN and the Internet. The first download will take a while, but your proxy should cache it so that subsequent downloads on other systems on your LAN will be much faster.

      --
      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
    29. Re:patch me up baby! by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Run arbitrary code through a midi file? That's huge, and deserves to be on the front page.

      How many people actually play MIDI files on a regular basis? Show of hands here.

      No?

      The only time Joe Average encounters a MIDI file is on Jane's Shitty Geocities Webpage.

      While the vulnerability is potentially dangerous, the exploit is uncommon enough that the actual threat level is pretty low IMO.

    30. Re:patch me up baby! by ClippyHater · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Don't be so sure. Think of the millions of Windows users launching executables from an e-mail they got. Now think of them clicking on a link to a webpage containing the exploit (of course they only see the "See my hot new photos" link in outlook). Page loads up, and that's all she wrote.

      I really can see this being a HUGE problem for millions.

    31. Re:patch me up baby! by JanusFury · · Score: 2, Informative

      And it's all thanks to shite security engineering in MS and non-conformance to standards (the MIDI playing is caused by a non-W3c HTML tag "BGSOUND").

      I don't see how BGSOUND has anything to do with this. You can play MIDIs in webpages without that tag. The OBJECT tag, for example... or an embedded media player control... or a regular old link.

      --
      using namespace slashdot;
      troll::post();
    32. Re:patch me up baby! by BigBir3d · · Score: 1

      "All seurity updates must be done."

      Regardless of their nature... they got nailed by virus (Outlook based) a while back... they are a little over zealous about it now. Which is fine. Just adds a little bloat :(

    33. Re:patch me up baby! by The+Phantom+Buffalo · · Score: 1
      I don't know, game development, maybe?

      You wouldn't notice by some of the games released recently, but I'm sure a little bit of testing going on also.

    34. Re:patch me up baby! by Rethcir · · Score: 1

      I can't get the midi of the battle music from Final Fantasy IV out of my head. daaa-daaa-dadadada dadadada, da da da da DAAAA... etc.

    35. Re:patch me up baby! by ssimpson · · Score: 2, Informative

      Regular old links need the users to click on a link whereas BGSOUND doesn't require user interaction. Not sure if Object tag / embedded media player can embed in the same way for Outlook / OE based e-mails (I would hope that the users get some kind of prompt, but knowing MS...).

      --
      "Mary had a crypto key, she kept it in escrow, and everything that Mary said, the Feds were sure to know."
    36. Re:patch me up baby! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is it possible to install Windows 2000 or XP without DirectX?

    37. Re:patch me up baby! by mwolff · · Score: 1

      Why not use the windows catalog part of windows update for patches then? You can download the actual patch files and redistribute them on your network as you like.

    38. Re:patch me up baby! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All it realy means is that for the entire time you've owned your computer and had it running windows products. Any hacker or cracker could use this to invade your computer and in all likelyhood several computers have already been violated in this way.

      How do you suppose this came to MS's attention? Likely someone else noticed it and told them. Which means that it is a exploit that is known in some circles before general public or MS's knowledge.

      Microsoft has a extensive history of flaws like this and there are probably several others like this out there waiting to be exploited.

      But that's just the price you pay for using inferior software like XP.

    39. Re:patch me up baby! by geckofiend · · Score: 1

      What's DirectX doing installed on your 200 corporate NT machines in the first place?

      Smells like bullshit to me.

    40. Re:patch me up baby! by FatherOfONe · · Score: 1

      Dude it was a joke....

      The sad part is that life in a large NT shop must be something like this for you to even think that this could have been true! :-)

      --
      The more I learn about science, the more my faith in God increases.
    41. Re:patch me up baby! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's windows remember. 2000 server comes with all the goodies default installed.

    42. Re:patch me up baby! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Regular old links need the users to click on a link whereas BGSOUND doesn't require user interaction.

      Yeah. I mean, who clicks on 'links' or 'buttons' on those new-fangled 'web pages' anyhow? You're a dumbass.

    43. Re:patch me up baby! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless you patch an NT 4.0 System...then you'll be rebooting...but who's still running NT 4.0?

    44. Re:patch me up baby! by Neck_of_the_Woods · · Score: 1


      Every linux fanboy does what you just did.

      Every week there's a venerability announced. What do you expect people to say? MS is certainly not good at keeping software secure so why shouldn't people complain and foam at the mouth? IMO MS deserves every bit of the criticism it gets.

      Now, for those of use that don't install Directx9 on our clusters, webservers, and ftp servers this is not an issue.

      Kind of like you guys on linux that don't need to worry about the BIND flaw if your not running BIND.

      The fact of the matter is Windows if far from perfect. True. You can however secure your windows box in such a matter that 90% of the issues that everyone foams at the mouth about don't apply to you. I don't need index servcies...it is not on my machine. I don't need SQL, it is not on my machine. I don't need IE, I run Mozilla and don't have to worry about that.

      What most linux users that bash microsoft the most forget is that windows can be secure if you strip all the crap off it that you don't need and lock it down. I am even going to go out on a limb and say that if all I run is DNS, strip it down to on listen on those ports, lock up the passwords, and firewall it in along with disabling all the other service it would run very very well and not require a reboot for a very long time. Sounds kind of what you do with linux no?

      You see windows run all kinds of freaky stuff, and it runs in from all different directions doing numerous different tasks. Each piece of software that loads on it brings with it a host of new ways to get into it. Strip a windows box down to do only one thing and lock it up, drop it behind a firewall, and you have a very secure box. Drop it online out of the box wide open running everything under the sun including directX9, iis, sql, ftp, IE, IM, netmeeting, vnc, outlook, citrix, word, excel, access, foxpro, interdev, ISA, and any host of other endless programs on it and your going to have issues.

      Just my 2 cents. Linux is great for a lot of things, so is Windows. Just don't assume that Linux is secure just because it is Linux. It has everything to do with the person setting it up. Linux can be set up bad just like windows. It just happends that windows is set up for shit more often....

      --
      Neck_of_the_Woods
      #/usr/local/surf/glassy/overhead
    45. Re:patch me up baby! by Nurgled · · Score: 1

      While the redistributable version of DirectX is handy if you've got more than one box from the same family (95 vs NT), since you only have to get the data once, you just know that dialup users (which make up a large proportion of Internet users) will shun the 32MB download (or the slightly less which the intelligent installer will pull down) does not outweigh the risk.

      Microsoft should provide a patch which just addresses this issue, rather than forcing users to download the entirity of DirectX 9. There will be lots of people who don't bother until some game comes bundled with DirectX 9b and says it requires it.

    46. Re:patch me up baby! by Angry+Pixie · · Score: 1

      ... Or, after the downloads and installations have completed, just scan through your folders to find the .CAB and .EXE files for the patch. Burn them to a disc, and save for later. That's what I do. That way whenever I reinstall Windows, I won't spend several hours downloading service packs and patches.

    47. Re:patch me up baby! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Running corporate counter strike?

    48. Re:patch me up baby! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You call him a fanboy and then expect him to read and understand what you're saying? They're not even rational, just don't bother.

    49. Re:patch me up baby! by Anonym1ty · · Score: 1
      it wasn't 11MB

      How many other updates did you fid out you needed while you were there?

    50. Re:patch me up baby! by Anonym1ty · · Score: 1

      Except all the patches and updates and service packs to the patches updates and service packs you needed come out.

      What I hate about the one off Windows Update is after you update the 1 critical thing, only then when you go back you find three critical updates to the one you've just got

      Granted I work mostly with consumer models which haven't been updated since Moses graduated HS, I have found it's always best to install the biggest bloated update (Read IE) First.

    51. Re:patch me up baby! by Anonym1ty · · Score: 1

      Yeah an exploit from MIDI files! Glad I turned off the who ability to do anything automatically with MIDI the first time I went to a webpage that shoved it down my throat.

      What is this anyway? Who finds this kind of thing? Is this the first sample of an RIAA alpha software for disabling a computer?

      Watch out, you illegally loaded a MIDI file of Smooth Criminal as the background NOISE from Johnny's First Web Page. RIAA: We'll have to shut that guy down

    52. Re:patch me up baby! by geggibus · · Score: 1

      Damn you! I'd just gotten the card game music from FFVIII out of my head.. Dada-dada-da-dadadada-dadada-da-dada-da-DAAA!...

    53. Re:patch me up baby! by ssimpson · · Score: 1

      You don't understand the difference between something happening automatically when a user hits an URL and the user having to initiate an action?

      Have you thought about the dozens of HTML only spams that people get that never get clicked on but are suceptible to this bug?

      Thank god for ACs ;)

      --
      "Mary had a crypto key, she kept it in escrow, and everything that Mary said, the Feds were sure to know."
    54. Re:patch me up baby! by more+fool+you · · Score: 2, Insightful

      sounds good in theory. in practice it's a little unreasonable to have to set maximum_object_size to well over 50MB (IE 6 SP anyone?)

    55. Re:patch me up baby! by more+fool+you · · Score: 1

      I missed the part when you explain why I need IE, Messenger & Outlook Express on a server?

    56. Re:patch me up baby! by Angry+Pixie · · Score: 1

      For me it went like this until I learned that Service Pack I contains the patches that come before it.

      Install Windows -> Drivers -> Critical Patches -> Optional Patches -> IE -> DirectX -> Media Player -> Secure system -> Tune system Install Applications -> Reinstall Windows

      There you have it. It's a neverending job, kinda like painting the Golden Gate Bridge.

    57. Re:patch me up baby! by suss · · Score: 1

      What's so special is you actually *don't* have to reboot after applying the patch.

      You do, actually. It's rare to not have to reboot in Windows 2000 after applying a patch/hotfix, even though MS promised us we'd hardly ever have to reboot again...

      Ok, so they're liars, what else is new.

      Remember that scene in Southpark Bigger, Longer, Uncut?

      General: What's wrong with this thing?! Fucking Windows '98! Get Bill Gates in here.
      Bill Gates: (enters escorted by two MPs)
      General: You told us Windows '98 would be faster and more efficient with better access to the internet!
      Bill Gates: It is faster. Over five million-
      General: (shoots Gates in the face)

      If only real life were that simple...

    58. Re:patch me up baby! by drunk_as_in_beer · · Score: 1

      You do, actually. It's rare to not have to reboot in Windows 2000 after applying a patch/hotfix, even though MS promised us we'd hardly ever have to reboot again...

      This particular patch didn't ask me to reboot, it was actually quite surprising.

      Hmmm.. I received another automatic update to patch a DirectX bug this morning. Did MS release another fix for this issue? Maybe the first patch had a bug in it?

      --
      --Drunk as in Beer
    59. Re:patch me up baby! by iLEZ · · Score: 1

      Blocking MIDI-files would mean that no more would i have to listen to all those cheesy MIDI versions of already cheesy tunes whenever i visit someones homepage. What a disaster.. Lets hear it for the blocking of MIDI files! Hip hip, Hurray! ;)

      --
      You cant fight in here, its a war room!
    60. Re:patch me up baby! by Anonym1ty · · Score: 1
      There you have it. It's a neverending job, kinda like painting the Golden Gate Bridge.

      Not so much like the Golden Gate. Because most repairs to the Golden Gate are to fix things that break or wear out. Most Windows repairs are patches to fix design flaws.

    61. Re:patch me up baby! by Angry+Pixie · · Score: 1

      I meant it's like painting the Golden Gate. It's an ongoing job, and just as soon as the paint crew is done, they've got to start all over again from the beginning ;)

  2. Tough one... by WD_40 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Let's see, pay for music and get F'ed... download for free and be fine (as long as you don't share).

    --

    "With sufficient thrust, pigs fly just fine." -- RFC 1925

    1. Re:Tough one... by Latent+IT · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Let's see, pay for music and get F'ed... download for free and be fine (as long as you don't share).

      So, let me see if I have this right - you think that files off a pay-for-music download site are more likely to be infected vs. files on Kazaa?

      Seriously?

    2. Re:Tough one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You think people pay to download MIDI files?

    3. Re:Tough one... by BahMehFeh · · Score: 1

      Cuz you plan on downloading a LOT of MIDI files from buymusic.com right? This affect MIDI only not MP3s and other compressed formats. Aside from that, you think MP3s from P2P networks are safer than from Apple, and other sanctioned music sellers? Right...

    4. Re:Tough one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The person I replied to might. Why not ask him?

    5. Re:Tough one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      a lot of ppl pay for midi files as ring tones for their mobile phones (at least in europe).
      general midi is called "polyphonic" and it's HOT phone-tech ;)

    6. Re:Tough one... by jmorris42 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Unless you running Linux, then make sure you have the latest mpg123 (and libmpg123, which powers xmms) or one of those mp3 files could be evil and 0wn3z your ass.

      Nobody is 100% safe these days. I used to be confident and tell people to 'hit me with their best shot' because I wouldn't be running untrusted executables and data files couldn't carry nasties. Now we have mpg123 and in the past we had a buffer overflow in libtiff. Pine could get you owned with a bogus header once. Sendmail of course has been a security nightmare.

      Yes *NIX is safer, sendmail in it's worst year never matched the horrors of Outlook, but never feel safe. Which sucks major ass because we shouldn't have to just accept as a given that the only safe computing is a sealed box with no external media or network connection. Personally I'd like to see a whole year set aside to making software SAFE instead of adding features.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    7. Re:Tough one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      simple... only complete idiots use wma....

      use mp3 and you are fine.

    8. Re:Tough one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, the vulnerability is in MIDI, and you're talking about wma and mp3?

      Have you been taking your meds?

    9. Re:Tough one... by croddy · · Score: 1

      MIDI is not an audio file format.

    10. Re:Tough one... by dimer0 · · Score: 4, Funny

      So, let me see if I have this right - you think that files off a pay-for-music download site are more likely to be infected vs. files on Kazaa?

      For those of us who are running Mozilla and not IE, etc, buymusic.com's home page has a quite amusing message:

      ---

      Thank you for visiting BuyMusic.com.

      In order to take full advantage of BuyMusic.com's offerings you must be on a Windows Operating System using Internet Explorer version 5.0 or higher.

      --- /That's/ the point the poster was making.

    11. Re:Tough one... by BahMehFeh · · Score: 1

      I know. I never said it wasn't.

    12. Re:Tough one... by Quarters · · Score: 2, Funny

      If you're paying someone so you can download craptastic MIDI files then this security flaw is the least of your problems.

    13. Re:Tough one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm entering the site completely fine regardless of what browser identification I send. Opera 7.2b2, Netscape 3.0, 4.78, 5.0 MSIE 6.0... All the same... So, er, bullshit?

    14. Re:Tough one... by ncc74656 · · Score: 1
      So, let me see if I have this right - you think that files off a pay-for-music download site are more likely to be infected vs. files on Kazaa?

      FWIW, MP3s will never fire up your browser and send it someplace you don't want to go. WMA (and WMV) files can have embedded links that pop open a web-browser window. Such a link could go to a page that would attempt to exploit this DirectX vulnerability to whatever end its creator wants. You'll never get porn popups or auto-installed spyware from playing MP3s.

      (As for downloads from a pay-for-music site, it's conceivable that they could take advantage of this capability for user tracking or even some sort of DRM scheme. Porn popups are admittedly not something they'd likely slip in.)

      --
      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
    15. Re:Tough one... by Paul+Carver · · Score: 1

      Wow, using Mozilla 1.4, sure enough all I get is a flat out IE required message. The URL that I get redirected to is even called http://www.buymusic.com/ierequired.htm

      It's not even a .html file, it's .htm so I guess they're hosting the site on a DOS machine.

      Oh well, cheap-cds.com

    16. Re:Tough one... by rekkanoryo · · Score: 1
      Personally I'd like to see a whole year set aside to making software SAFE instead of adding features.
      That's irrelevant. No matter how "secure" and "safe" daemons/services and programs are made today, tomorrow the next hacker worth his salt or security expert will find a flaw that'll have to be patched. Software is a never-ending cycle of bugs and security flaws by nature. Sure, better design leads to fewer big problems, but there are ALWAYS going to be problems. And as you pointed out, open source is just as vulnerable to security flaws as closed source.
    17. Re:Tough one... by theendlessnow · · Score: 1
      Yes *NIX is safer, sendmail in it's worst year never matched the horrors of Outlook,

      But sendmail is generally a MTA (it's a poor MUA) while Outlook is a MUA.. Exchange is the MTA used under Windows.

      So.. a better comparison is to compare the number of flaws inside of Unix mail or mailx vs. Outlook under Windows.

    18. Re:Tough one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      ...we shouldn't have to just accept as a given that the only safe computing is a sealed box with no external media or network connection.


      You forgot that it should also be sealed inside a steel vault.

    19. Re:Tough one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot that it should also be sealed inside a steel vault.

      And the only user should also be the only admin. No one else can be allowed physical access. And even then, it's not safe if the computer EATS YOUR BRAIN!

    20. Re:Tough one... by eckythump · · Score: 1
      yeah, its called proof, and their are lots of languages where you can prove the correctness of a program..

      In fact there is a rich tradition of proof in mathematics

      some languages, like lazy functional languages have other nice benifits... but hey we've got to give the programmer total control because having a big ego is all about bare to the metal demo coding asm machoism... and c is just a set of macro's ontop of asm... its basic essence is to retain imperitive control over what the computer is doing... i mean why cant we all do a couple of yrs uni math learn about lambda calc ... and protect the name of computer programmers like electrical engineers in canada instead of every visbasictard being able to get a job as a "computer programmer"... probably could even do a simple proof by induction or contra-positive proof... or show completeness of xor & nand, or even really know what a computer is... how the fuck can you call yourself a computer programmer if you dont know what a computer is?

    21. Re:Tough one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or you could use a processor architecture which isn't exploitably vulnerable to buffer overflow and smashing the stack (ie: not x86).
      In the meantime, patch non-executable page enforcement into your kernel. If you can.

    22. Re:Tough one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Jesus... What the hell is so hard about doing proper dynamic allocation or buffer bounds checking on data of unknown length? Or access logic for that matter?

      Just don't do stupid shit like:
      char buf[1024];
      sprintf(buf, string_of_unknown_length);

      Use the proper function: snprintf

      Code can be mathematically proven to be safe. The problem is that most coders do not have the time, inclination, or neccessary expertise to do so.

    23. Re:Tough one... by Nakarti · · Score: 1

      And yet, I do feel safe. I feel safer keeping my personal files on a computer at home that requires a password and special information to access from anywhere on the net, to carrying it around in my backpack, with a lock, because just scissors could get it open, and it's clear to anyone that I'm keeping something important. Nobody knows I'm not running a CD-based (hard) diskless system at home. Same with sending payments online vs. mail. Why? Month and a half for a check to wander through.

    24. Re:Tough one... by iLEZ · · Score: 1

      Personally I'd like to see a whole year set aside to making software SAFE instead of adding features.
      One of the smartest things ive heard on /. so far.

      --
      You cant fight in here, its a war room!
    25. Re:Tough one... by jmorris42 · · Score: 1

      I was attempting to compare the worst UNIX program to the worst Windows one. I don't think you will find a more worthy candidate on either side than Sendmail and Outlook. And Outlook sucks far harder because it was DESIGNED to be broken.

      Granted that after years of being a laughing stock, Microsoft has finally started fixing the more fatal flaws in Outlook/Outlook Express, but I still wouldn't ever trust it because it still just embeds IE to display messages, which is fatal.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
  3. Received the Update Notification and Fixed by NoCoward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    My Win2k solution already downloaded and installed the update last night automatically via WindowsUpdate.com. Nice system.

    1. Re:Received the Update Notification and Fixed by FrostedWheat · · Score: 4, Funny

      My Win2k solution

      If that was the solution, what the heck was the problem?!

    2. Re:Received the Update Notification and Fixed by TedCheshireAcad · · Score: 1

      So you let this 'solution' download and install software without your approval?

      I sure hope that isn't a production environment.

    3. Re:Received the Update Notification and Fixed by mjmalone · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      I'd like to see someone reverse engineer this "nice system" then hack a few nameservers and point update.microsoft.com at their new "windows update" server.

    4. Re:Received the Update Notification and Fixed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Debian's had this for years. It's called 'apt-get upgrade'.

    5. Re:Received the Update Notification and Fixed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your face.

    6. Re:Received the Update Notification and Fixed by radish · · Score: 1

      The updates are signed. Fake that ;)

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

    7. Re:Received the Update Notification and Fixed by orthogonal · · Score: 1

      My Win2k solution already downloaded and installed the update last night automatically via WindowsUpdate.com. Nice system.

      How nice for you. I've got a W2K box at SP3. Service Pack 4 goes through about thity minutes of installing, then tells me that "An Error Occurred". No indication of what, just a recommendation that I roll back SP4.

      So after this happend four times, with both the "network" (downloaded full patch) and "express" (which is relly install over HTML TCP/IP), I decide to try the auto update.

      Auto update wants to do about 11 patches. At reboot, I get a driver error of some sort. It reboots, hits the error. It reboots, hits... you get the idea.

      So I do a safe boot about seven times, each time removing another patch, working backwards from the last applied patch. Finally I get rid of the problem patch.

      Of course, I'm still not patched, secure, or running SP4.

      So I've had to reinstall W2K on another partition. Now I just have to re-install every driver, software package, preference setting, and I'll be back to where I was.

      That should only take about three weeks.

      Thanks, Microsoft.

    8. Re:Received the Update Notification and Fixed by mjmalone · · Score: 1

      that sounds like a challenge! seriously tho, what about mitm?

    9. Re:Received the Update Notification and Fixed by Radon+Knight · · Score: 3, Funny

      >>My Win2k solution

      >If that was the solution, what the heck was the problem?!

      His computer wouldn't stop working properly.

    10. Re:Received the Update Notification and Fixed by johnnyb · · Score: 1

      Actually, some hackers a few years ago received a code-signing key from Network Solutions that was valid for Microsoft. Since most Microsoft products have Certificate Revocation List checking turned OFF by default, my guess is that these individuals (who were never found as far as I'm aware) could do just that.

    11. Re:Received the Update Notification and Fixed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Each Windows box has a copy of the Microsoft public key, the updates are signed with their private key.

      Unless you can replace the Microsoft private key, then this approach isn't really susceptible to man in the middle.

    12. Re:Received the Update Notification and Fixed by iainl · · Score: 1

      "The updates are signed. Fake that ;)"

      Creating a trojan that appears to be signed code: difficult.

      Creating a signed trojan and then hosting it on windowsupdate.microsoft.com without them noticing: damn near impossible, surely?

      --
      "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
    13. Re:Received the Update Notification and Fixed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds like a severe case of user idiocy to me. Perhaps if you weren't so incompetent, that wouldn't have happened.

    14. Re:Received the Update Notification and Fixed by iainl · · Score: 1

      Lovely idea, but anyone with auto-update turned on for Microsoft Update will have already had the patch which tells Windows the key is invalid for all products. Its too late now.

      --
      "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
    15. Re:Received the Update Notification and Fixed by Fizzlewhiff · · Score: 1

      Yeah, my XP solution did the same. Sweet deal. Now if only Red Hat update worked that way. I suppose I could put up2date -u in my crontab.

      --

      'Same speed C but faster'
    16. Re:Received the Update Notification and Fixed by isorox · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes, nice system, but why is this unusual enough to be modded up? I'd guess any OS worth its salt would have the option of auto-updating with the latest security patches. My laptop does when I connect to the internet via a network, my desktop does it every few hours, and I can alway mannually apt-get update && apt-get upgrade

    17. Re:Received the Update Notification and Fixed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is this thing that you can do, which will stop you being affected by this sort of problem.

      It's called Backing up.

      I keep tape backups of all of my data as well as a disk based ghost of the system drive of all of my servers especially to prevent this sort of problem taking me 3 weeks to rebuild my workstation.

      Also, if you know what you're doing you'll be able to poke about your registry/file system and fix the problem without having to rebuild the machine.

      Also did you look on Technet? (www.microsoft.com/technet) it is very usefull for this sort of thing.

    18. Re:Received the Update Notification and Fixed by bogie · · Score: 1

      Considering the Billions of dollars(Yes Billions) lost to flaws in IE and Outlook every year I'd say its the nicest system that most people don't even use.

      --
      If you wanna get rich, you know that payback is a bitch
    19. Re:Received the Update Notification and Fixed by Dog+and+Pony · · Score: 1

      A "solution", as opposed to a "system", "computer" or even "box" makes a much, much better "case" for "integrating", "B2B", "B2C" and of course it also runs Java, XML and .NET "utilizing" the "latest technology". It is also much more expensive, but makes nicer brochures.

      Gah! Dot-com flashbacks! I feel like I once again have a monkey...errm... manager on my back, speaking "sales-pitch", that odd but apparently popular language of 2001.

    20. Re:Received the Update Notification and Fixed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In theory yes,

      but you have assumed that the devbots wrote the code correctly.... hah hah ... or that there is no "joshua" password.

    21. Re:Received the Update Notification and Fixed by orthogonal · · Score: 1

      There is this thing that you can do, which will stop you being affected by this sort of problem.

      It's called Backing up.


      It's good advice. It's also more than I want to do for my home PC. But your point is well taken.

    22. Re:Received the Update Notification and Fixed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's good advice. It's also more than I want to do for my home PC. But your point is well taken.

      Uhhhh....you'll run win2k on your home machine, but not take the time to back it up? yeah..that makes sense. Please understand, I fully support your right to run whatever OS you want, and to back up or not as you please, it just seems odd to me that you'd go through all the trouble of reinstalling win2k every time something messes up, which will take you weeks, but can't be bothered to back up every now and then. Even just a registry backup would have likely saved you the trouble you're currently in. I find it way more fun to back up than to rebuild....but that's me.

    23. Re:Received the Update Notification and Fixed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now if only I could reboot over the Internet each morning directly from a MS server, my computers might be safe until noon.

    24. Re:Received the Update Notification and Fixed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NT 4.0?

    25. Re:Received the Update Notification and Fixed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't know very much, do you? The certificate was not Microsoft's, it just had a similar name.

    26. Re:Received the Update Notification and Fixed by jpop32 · · Score: 1

      My Win2k solution already downloaded and installed the update last night automatically via WindowsUpdate.com. Nice system.

      This means you're not really up to date. AFAIK, SP4 for W2k, which is out for about a month now, adresses this issue.

    27. Re:Received the Update Notification and Fixed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      needed a sore rectum, asap?

  4. Microsoft software has security flaw... what's new by advocate_one · · Score: 5, Funny

    move along now folks... nothing new here...
    mind you... the particular buffer overflow is unusual...MIDI files... who'd have thought???

    --
    Donald 'Duck' Dunn: We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline.
  5. ...So? by Jonsey · · Score: 2, Interesting

    So what you're saying is Windows, without proper patches & updating us unsecure?

    Sounds like every other OS out there! : )

    Nah, thanks for calling attention to this, I'm going to be patching my clients to 9.0b tonight.

    --
    I assert that my comment is only my opinion, not that of any employer, past, present or future.
    1. Re:...So? by JVert · · Score: 1

      Indeed, I'm sure the linux kernel historically doesn't have as many exploits as windows but include all the different packages in the linux os and i'm sure your close enough to say: blegh, it happens to them all.

      Am I being redundant? What else is there to talk about on a story like this? how secure openGL is?

    2. Re:...So? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is Windows is insecure even with all the patches and updates in place. At least in the Open Source community, they work to fix security issues and critical bugs quickly. On the otherhand, M$ is known for ignoring known security issues and critical bugs.

    3. Re:...So? by MukiMuki · · Score: 1

      You know, a few things have become apparent over the last few years. 1. Microsoft can't get software to work right on an Operating system IT CREATED. (bought, stole, whatever, it's theirs) 2. Microsoft is trying to get this Trusted Computing initiative to work. 3. Microsoft has already tried a version on Windows XP and the X-Box. 4. Buffer overflows are gods. Am I the only one who sees cheap exploits like this being the future of piracy? Maybe the hardware aspect of a real trusted computer is much stronger than the X-Box's... Of course, Microsoft could avoid all this by making apps without significant flaws in them in the first place... right after thows genetric engineers get those damn pigs up 'n flying, anyway.

  6. logged in by dirvish · · Score: 2, Informative

    If I remember/understand correctly someone has to be logged onto the machine to take advantage of this exploit. If they are allready logged on they could do lots of other stuff anyways? Hmmmm...doesn't sound too serious.

    1. Re:logged in by spydir31 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Wrong, all you need is that someone view a webpage with the following tag
      <BGSOUND SRC="exploit.MID" >
      (assume the file exists :)
      IE plays these by default.

    2. Re:logged in by AndroidCat · · Score: 1
      And yet Microsoft is claiming that you have to click on it (and possibly say okay.)
      "They'd have to come up with some way to get the user to click on that file," said Stephen Toulouse of Microsoft's Security Response Center, noting that default security settings in recent versions of Microsoft Outlook e-mail software and the Internet Explorer Web browser prevent automatic launching of such files.
      Hmm, if the bug is in the MIDI play routines, I don't see why a BGSOUND couldn't cause the same problem. I'd take Stephen's click claim with a grain of salt. (After all, how lame would the software be to have a buffer overrun playing a fscking MIDI file?!?!)
      --
      One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
    3. Re:logged in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Trolls have been socially engineering people to click on Goatsex links. I fail to see how getting someone to click a link that leads to a bad MIDI could be any harder.

    4. Re:logged in by Java+Pimp · · Score: 1

      I don't think the article includes all the details, however Microsoft's Security Bulletin does.

      ...If the file was embedded in a page the vulnerability could be exploited when a user visited the Web page...

      --
      Ascalante: Your bride is over 3,000 years old.
      Kull: She told me she was 19!
    5. Re:logged in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What I wonder is how it's possible to crash the entire system by playing a midi-file. In a proper system the malfunctioning midi-play routine (should be in userspace and nowhere else) should die and that whould be the end of it. Sadly it's a worm-ridden piece-o-shit with no separation what so ever. Imagine a nuclear powerplant which uses the same circuitry for the main reactor as for the walkman the cleaning lady polishing the crew rooms is listening to. So when her little walkman hick-ups.. .

    6. Re:logged in by spydir31 · · Score: 1

      Actually, you'd want to go to eEye's Security advisory for that.

    7. Re:logged in by blibbleblobble · · Score: 1
      "<BGSOUND SRC="exploit.MID" >
      IE plays these by default.
      "

      Luckily, background noise on web-pages is annoying enough to prompt people to turn the bastard off anyway. Nothing worse than browsing with your speakers on in MSIE.

      *DING!*
    8. Re:logged in by jerryasher · · Score: 1

      In all fairness to the developers,
      After all, how lame would the software be to have a buffer overrun playing a fscking MIDI file?!?!

      No more or less lame than any buffer overflow that was created after Morris took down much of the net in 1988.

    9. Re:logged in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm picturing the goatse page with a background midi file...

      "Bend me, shape me, any way you want me..."

      "There's a hole in my heart that goes all the way to..."

      Oh god, no!

    10. Re:logged in by AndroidCat · · Score: 1

      I think that there's a couple orders of magnitude difference in complexity between network code and playing MIDI files. (Although buffer overflows are always lame.)

      --
      One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
  7. Windows ... by torpor · · Score: 0, Interesting

    ... flaws ... whats next?

    Hey, it isn't news any more. Windows security, that is.

    I'll go back to considering the possibility of using Microsoft profucts when I haven't heard a single security problem for ... a year.

    In the meantime, I've completely stopped using all Microsoft products. For good. Anyone else?

    --
    ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
    1. Re:Windows ... by iapetus · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I'd like to. Could you recommend an alternative operating system that hasn't had a single security problem in a year, and has been adding new functionality over that period?

      --
      ++ Say to Elrond "Hello.".
      Elrond says "No.". Elrond gives you some lunch.
    2. Re:Windows ... by Winterblink · · Score: 1
      I'll go back to considering the possibility of using Microsoft profucts when I haven't heard a single security problem for ... a year.

      You know, that's EXACTLY why the other non-Microsoft operating systems are better. Oh wait...

      --
      "I'm a leaf on the wind. Watch how I soar."
      -Hoban Washburn
    3. Re:Windows ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Same here. I've worked with Microsoft software for about 2 decades. I've helped my friends and family countless times, but not anymore.

      I now own a powerbook, am saving for a powermac, got my parents and two of my friends to switch to an iMac and have switched 3 other friends to linux.

      For me, Microsoft has joined the RIAA and MPAA: full boycott mode.

    4. Re:Windows ... by BigBir3d · · Score: 1

      I'll go back to considering the possibility of using Microsoft profucts when I haven't heard a single security problem for ... a year.

      What OS can give you that now? None that have anything installed, or communicate on a network of some sort. All machines are vulnerable. I would have figured that a user ID as low as yours would imply something... apparently not.

    5. Re:Windows ... by drwhite · · Score: 1

      yup no longer a m$ user...got bored of the interface and it's 'clean cut image'...speaking of security advisories, check out FreeBSD, the last major advisory was back in April 8th...now damn...thats impressive...

    6. Re:Windows ... by nolife · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Can you name another OS that exposes a security flaw via the BGSOUND tag? How about one where simply previewing or opening an email will cause security problems? How about one where scripts can be run and have access to your address books for mass emailing. How about one where browsing the web with certain active x controls causes security problems? How about one where the mime encoding is ignored or misrepresented and arbitrary local programs can be run via email or web browsing? How about one where the help system can run arbitrary code in the background? How about embedding viruses and macros into documents that can run arbitrary code and start any program automaticially?. I can keep going if you'd like. Can you even name a single OS that has ANY of these issues of data and code combined into one? Getting a perfect bugfree OS is unrealistic, getting one that is swiss cheese and a complete security clusterf**k should not be acceptable either.

      --
      Bad boys rape our young girls but Violet gives willingly.
    7. Re:Windows ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      OpenBSD did only have a single exploit in the last seven years. (In default install profile).

      But i'm not sure it was in the last year, if it's earlier then OpenBSD is your answer! :)

    8. Re:Windows ... by jmorris42 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'd love to see an operating system that didn't get a security problem in a year, regardless of it's state of feature accretion. But even OpenBSD has had one exploit now and they play some real funny games to get it down to only one. Bind, fr example, isn't counted because the minimal install doesn't include it. But if you run a nameserver on OpenBSD BIND is the one that gets installed. So by that logic RedHat shouldn't count BIND bugs either since they also don't install it by default.

      I want an OS that can go a year without an exploit in ANY of the software they consider part of their 'distribution'. And still have enough functionality to be useful as a general purpose Internet server. I realize a secure desktop is going to be a lot harder, but lets at least shoot for a real secure server.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    9. Re:Windows ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't believe FreeDOS have reported any remote vulnerabilities in the past year..

    10. Re:Windows ... by KillerHamster · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Don't know much about it, but how about OpenVMS?

    11. Re:Windows ... by iapetus · · Score: 4, Informative

      Fine. But as soon as you want to do something useful with OpenBSD, you need to go beyond the default install profile, which is set up to be as secure as possible by disabling everything. Once you start enabling even common and inoffensive services, you hit security problems.

      OpenBSD security advisories from this year (for version 3.2):

      # March 31, 2003: A buffer overflow in the address parsing in sendmail(8) may allow an attacker to gain root privileges.

      # March 24, 2003: A cryptographic weaknesses in the Kerberos v4 protocol can be exploited on Kerberos v5 as well.

      # March 19, 2003: OpenSSL is vulnerable to an extension of the ``Bleichenbacher'' attack designed by Czech researchers Klima, Pokorny and Rosa.

      # March 18, 2003: Various SSL and TLS operations in OpenSSL are vulnerable to timing attacks.

      # March 5, 2003: A buffer overflow in lprm(1) may allow an attacker to elevate privileges to user daemon..

      # March 3, 2003: A buffer overflow in the envelope comments processing in sendmail(8) may allow an attacker to gain root privileges.

      # February 25, 2003: httpd(8) leaks file inode numbers via ETag header as well as child PIDs in multipart MIME boundary generation. This could lead, for example, to NFS exploitation because it uses inode numbers as part of the file handle.

      # February 22, 2003: In ssl(8) an information leak can occur via timing by performing a MAC computation even if incorrect block cipher padding has been found, this is a countermeasure. Also, check for negative sizes, in allocation routines.

      # January 20, 2003: A double free exists in cvs(1) that could lead to privilege escalation for cvs configurations where the cvs command is run as a privileged user.

      --
      ++ Say to Elrond "Hello.".
      Elrond says "No.". Elrond gives you some lunch.
    12. Re:Windows ... by addaon · · Score: 1
      --

      I've had this sig for three days.
    13. Re:Windows ... by WNight · · Score: 2, Insightful

      QNX.

      But really, Linux and MacOS X are both better, and while there have been bugs found in each, if the bug isn't one in a component you use, or in the kernel, can you count it? When I update my system, many of the updates are for third-party packages. As if MS provided patches for Eudora.

    14. Re:Windows ... by AndroidCat · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't mind so much if these were subtle bugs in a complex part of the OS, but a buffer overrun when playing a MIDI file?? MIDI isn't exactly rocket science: Play this note on this channel at this volume for this long. How could they mess that up? So much for trust in their software.

      --
      One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
    15. Re:Windows ... by temojen · · Score: 1
      How about one where scripts can be run and have access to your address books for mass emailing.

      Any UNIX-Like OS. Fortunately, most people don't run as root most of the time, so mostly just their home dirs are vulnerable to alteration. But with a local root exploit or a keystroke logger | grep "su -"...

    16. Re:Windows ... by acidtripp101 · · Score: 1

      I want an OS that can go a year without an exploit in ANY of the software they consider part of their 'distribution'.

      So, you aren't looking for an OS then... you're looking for better software. Good luck. In all honesty, openBSD is your best bet. They do reviews of all of their software to make it much more secure (even if it's not 'feature rich'). That's why you get openBSD BIND when you install it. Granted, you won't have absolute security, but that's impossible.

      And, if you don't like the OpenBSD style, NetBSD,known primarily for it's portability has excelent security (though, not as good as OpenBSD, in my oppinion)

      I realize a secure desktop is going to be a lot harder, but lets at least shoot for a real secure server.

      You realize that your security is only as strong as you make it... Heck, even windows can be secured as well as linux, it just takes time.

      --
      Not Free(as in beer). Free(as in "I'm free to beat you over the head for being a dumbass")
    17. Re:Windows ... by fermion · · Score: 1
      I don't think the issue is security. I think it is the presence of excessive consumer level functionality.

      If I understand the problem, this is bug in the MIDI interpreter that seriously jeopardizes the health of the computer. One can therefore imagine a firm that now must waste person-hours corrected a problem for which there is absolutely no business need. Why a machine, which really only need to run MS Office, a vertical market ported from Unix, and an email client, needs a MIDI subsystem would be beyond me. In fact, why Outlook needs to renders HTML is also beyond me.

      Which is just to say that MS needs to be more responsive to customer needs, not the compulsive efforts to satisfy advertisers and spammers. MS can be responsive. We say this when they started shipping an OS with most services turn off.

      And, of course, OSS already do this. We can add functionality as we need it, but the default system is generally bare bones.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    18. Re:Windows ... by nolife · · Score: 1

      True, should have been clearer, scripts that are automatically installed and run by opening or 'previewing' an email that can access your address book or whatever it is written to do.

      --
      Bad boys rape our young girls but Violet gives willingly.
    19. Re:Windows ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One thing. All the exploits listed were for third party software. They happened to be part of the bundle, but were not part of the core os.

      Another thing. Most of those advisories become extremely limited issues if you setup the services right.

      Does anyone still run sendmail as root? Every version that has ever come out has had holes.

      The problem with windows is that application level logic is slowly being drawn into the os, making most security problems an order of magnitude more signifigant.

    20. Re:Windows ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try an OS [openbsd.org] that has been worked from the ground up with security in mind.

    21. Re:Windows ... by 3Bees · · Score: 1

      Oh Jesus Christ! Comparing any of those bugs and security flaws to this one is ridiculous! For god's sake, this is a security flaw that allows execution of arbitrary code after viewing a goddamn MIDI file!!! You can compare notes on security flaws, but get some perspective on their severity!

      --
      "I think we should tax people who stand in water! " - Mr. Gumby
    22. Re:Windows ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I'd like to. Could you recommend an alternative operating system that hasn't had a single security problem in a year, and has been adding new functionality over that period?"

      Howabout an os which has had only one problem in the year?

      Or indeed, in the decade.

    23. Re:Windows ... by Politburo · · Score: 1

      When I update my system, many of the updates are for third-party packages.

      Okay, but if Linus & Co. also wrote a window manager, web browser, email client, etc., you would see less "third-party" fixes, and more "Linux" fixes. If you're going to compare kernel to kernel, do it. If you're going to compare overall product to product, do that. Don't compare Linux Kernel to Windows Product.

      Note: I understand the issues raised with regards to minor application exploits causing whole system hacks. That's not what I'm talking about here.

    24. Re:Windows ... by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 1

      I can name an OS that completely corrupted my filesystem when I downloaded its latest kernel.

      A lot of your gripes are with applications anyway.

      Next.

      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
    25. Re:Windows ... by nolife · · Score: 1

      A lot of your gripes are with applications anyway

      Applications that are so tightly integrated into the OS that they are not really seperate applications anymore. That was my point. A new version of DirectX comes out that allows Internet Explorer and ActiveX controls to open up a security hole that can manipulate the underlying OS. Try removing DirectX or finding a third party application with similar funcionality, try removing IE and see what else will no longer work. These items were integrated so tightly on purpose for increased convienence and to tie you into everything MS. The Mozilla Firebird browser for W32 is a zip equivelent of a tarball, unzip and double click the exe file and it is running, there is no OS modification at all. This integration was a major issue during the antitrust case. Another example is MS Windows update that REQUIRES a recent version of IE, I am sure MS could easily come up with a small standalone application like every other software company in the world uses to allow automated scheduling and downloading of updates. They choose to tie these together to limit the less technical from wandering for alternatives.

      Applications or not, this and many other flaws are involved with the OS and functions outside of the at risk applications. Integrating data with application code and scripting and tying it all together with the core of the OS is a convienence but also a security risk.

      --
      Bad boys rape our young girls but Violet gives willingly.
    26. Re:Windows ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Applications that are so tightly integrated into the OS that they are not really seperate applications anymore. That was my point.

      What, you mean like....telnet, and ftp...and sendmail...and BIND...all of which have had MULTIPLE exploits to them over the years which allow people to gain root on your *nix box. Why is it that people can totally bitch about MS security holes but pretend like *nix has never had any? Sure, windows (3.xx|9[?]|xp|2000) is less secure, but that doesn't mean that *nix is TOTALLY secure and with NO problems. If it was, no one would ever be able to hack a *nix box without stealing the root password from the admin. Hint: it's possible.

    27. Re:Windows ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      CP/M
      No new reported bugs/exploits for what, 2 decades?

      Take that.

    28. Re:Windows ... by nolife · · Score: 1

      Again, you completely missed the point. I am talking about using integration of applications into the OS and then allowing these applications to accept application data and software code (from anyone in the world that chooses to email you or from any web page you visit) and run files. That is completely different issue all together. That method is NOT safer by any stretch of the imagination.
      Not one of the applications you mentioned above is required to be installed on a nix system, they can be installed at will and removed as easily. Adding or removing those applicatins only results in the loss or gain of that applications functions, not other systems or loss of major parts of the OS's functionality. These applications can be installed, removed, or replaced with any alternative or functionality that you desire. They do have holes but not a single one of them was triggered by viewing a web page with a BGSOUND tag, by opening an email, or by viewing a rouge porn site. Can you name me one hole on a *nix box that would be triggered the same way? You need to compare apples to apples here.

      --
      Bad boys rape our young girls but Violet gives willingly.
    29. Re:Windows ... by andrewski · · Score: 1

      Guess what? If I do a

      sudo rm /usr/bin/telnet

      my system still works fine. Same with sendmail, and BIND, and ftp. The point is that in a sane universe, individual components may be removed or even lost but the system will survive. Control is left to the administrator of the machine, not imposed by the vendor. Removal of apps is normal when securing any sort of machine that allows it.

      With the MS 'solution' you have no options here. Internet Explorer is a buggy, messy browser, but is already mostly impossible to completely remove. Things are going on in the background which, while some may be turned off, you are quite likely to break shit by doing so! There is real evidence that MS is actually invading your privacy. Just thinking about the bugs in Windows and all MS products, and thinking about the time they spend coming up with new ways to invade your privacy instead of FIXING those bugs makes my mind boggle.

      Which model do you choose: an environment of standards and decency, or one tailor-made for the lowest common denominator? At least with '*nix' you aren't sharecropping.

    30. Re:Windows ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "httpd(8) leaks file inode numbers via ETag header as well as child PIDs in multipart MIME boundary generation."

      Admittedly this is roughly equivalent in severity to "viewing a web page formats your hard disk". Apart from the fact that I don't understand the above sentence...

      just joking ;-)

    31. Re:Windows ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You wanna talk security. Let's talk WinME, probably the most secure OS ever made. This is because anytime it is touched its kernel crashes and no one can access the thing. Now that's security.

    32. Re:Windows ... by torpor · · Score: 1

      "All machines are vulnerable."

      Oh, fine then, that makes life much easier, LOL. I'll go back to Windows right away, Mr. Gates, Sir.

      No OS can guarantee total security right now, but there are some OS'es that can guarantee that you won't be completely butt-raped by security problems every week... unlike M$ Windows.

      --
      ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
    33. Re:Windows ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For the love of God!!

      EXCLAIM!!!!

    34. Re:Windows ... by WNight · · Score: 1

      In some sense they do. Mutt isn't written by them, but it's the sysadmin's mail program, Tux is the web server kernel module.

      Microsoft doesn't really write all that much, an OS, a browser, a media player, and an office suite. It's just the way they do it that ties them so closely together.

      Of course, I think everyone, Linux and Windows, needs a much more fine-grained set of access controls, preferably application specific. There's no reason for an email program to write anything outside of a config directory and a download directory. There's no reason for an office suite to access any files that aren't of it's filetypes, especially in write mode. Browsers should be chrooted into a sandbox. I think we should start running everything chrooted actually. There's no reason for my browser to look at my office suite. If I really want it, I'll make a shared directory they can both access.

      We need to recognize that the important thing to most everyone isn't the system, it's the data. If your data gets destroyed, it's over. If the system gets garbled, you reinstall. What we need to do is offer data integrity features so that you can barely lose data if you try, like backups that aren't owned by you, so a virus or trojan can't take them out.

  8. Huh? BuyMusic? by mhore · · Score: 3, Insightful

    From what I read, the exploit comes in the form of a weird MIDI file. Are you buying MIDI files from BuyMusic, or...?

    Mike.

    --

    Mmmm......sacrelicious.

    1. Re:Huh? BuyMusic? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Hello and welcome to Slashdot. Please be aware that "the facts" have very little to do with "the story" here. This particular story did not mention beleagured Apple Computer's iTunes music store.

      Please stay tuned for the next story, "Linux possibly defmaed somewhere".

    2. Re:Huh? BuyMusic? by finkployd · · Score: 1

      I think the joke was regarding how buymusic checks your browser and only lets you in if you are on IE under Windows. Pretty much forcing you to be vulnerable to all kinds of unpatched exploit goodness.

      Finkployd

    3. Re:Huh? BuyMusic? by MachineShedFred · · Score: 3, Funny

      Yeah, that's the track that only costs $0.79

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
  9. Hmmm... by chrisgeleven · · Score: 5, Funny

    Only every single supported version of Windows has this flaw? Thank God, I thought I was in trouble here.

    1. Re:Hmmm... by iainl · · Score: 1

      "Only every single supported version of Windows has this flaw? Thank God, I thought I was in trouble here"

      Yes, this does indeed mean that pirate copies of the OS can't be infected, as they are not supported by Microsoft. Really, it does...

      --
      "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
  10. Wha... by mgcsinc · · Score: 5, Informative

    ""They'd have to come up with some way to get the user to click on that file," said Stephen Toulouse of Microsoft's Security Response Center, noting that default security settings in recent versions of Microsoft Outlook e-mail software and the Internet Explorer Web browser prevent automatic launching of such files. " Last I checked, as annoying as the feature is, the ability to have IE play MIDI files autonomyously is still there; a friend sent a link to me last night with a lovely display of world architecture and sappy MIDI music playing in the background... This is not a matter of downloading, not a matter of clicking, MIDI files have always been thought harmless, and its that feeling of complacency which threatens to make this dangerous for common users...

    1. Re:Wha... by chill · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Last I checked, as annoying as the feature is, the ability to have IE play MIDI files autonomyously is still there; a friend sent a link to me last night with a lovely display of world architecture and sappy MIDI music playing in the background...

      That's the kicker. I know a LOT of sites that do this. A couple of financial services sites I frequent have Registered Reps that seem to think a MIDI that runs in the background lends "ambiance" or some such to their site. They INSIST on it.

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    2. Re:Wha... by RebelWebmaster · · Score: 1

      Are you really worried about a financial site using bad MIDI files to hax0r your computer?

    3. Re:Wha... by Richardsonke1 · · Score: 1

      Argh! I hate those sites. If I ever happen to stumble into a site that has background music, I go back and never come again. They lost my business. Websites are for reading, not listening to some really crappy midi files.

      --
      "Men lie."
      "Yeah, about sleeping with other women, but never about bioluminescent plankton."
      -Dan Brown
    4. Re:Wha... by Cereal+Box · · Score: 1

      ... But I don't think IE uses DirectX to play those MIDI files, just like it doesn't use DirectX to blit JPEGs to the screen either.

    5. Re:Wha... by chill · · Score: 1

      Are you really worried about a financial site using bad MIDI files to hax0r your computer?

      Considering *I* am responsible for the security of those sites and no one has any idea where the MIDI files originated, yes.

      But there is an upside to all this.

      This is the PERFECT opportunity to scour the web and purge all of those evil background MIDI files!

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    6. Re:Wha... by dschuetz · · Score: 1

      Last I checked, as annoying as the feature is, the ability to have IE play MIDI files autonomyously is still there

      Yeah, and it's in Mozilla / Firebird, too. Every time I run across a page playing lousy MIDI music (or even good music) I go searching through the prefs panel, hoping some new setting came in with the last release.

      Does anyone know of a hidden preferences setting to disable auto-play of music?

      (I don't know if Moz would use the DirectX midiplayer, anyway, but I want to turn off this damned music regardless).

    7. Re:Wha... by vasqzr · · Score: 3, Funny

      Argh! I hate those sites. If I ever happen to stumble into a site that has background music, I go back and never come again. They lost my business. Websites are for reading, not listening to some really crappy midi files.


      Right! Web sites are for animated GIF's and blinking text!

    8. Re:Wha... by Thavius · · Score: 1

      I hate sites that insist on midi music. I rarely come across them, but when I do, I immediately think, "WTF is that? Where's it comming from? How do I make it stop? Where's my gun?"

      On professional sites, such as your financial services sites, this seems very unprofessional. Ambiance, bah. Do that through good page design, not stupid-sounding midi. It's like I'm going to use more services if "The Entertainer" is playing horribly through my speakers when I'm at the site.

    9. Re:Wha... by mgcsinc · · Score: 1

      I think "Play sounds in web sites" should do it in IE under the advanced tab, but for moz I couldn't tell ya...

    10. Re:Wha... by chill · · Score: 1

      Actually the song is "I Am Woman". It is a female rep.

      And I have been conditioned to hit the ESC key as fast as the site loads. ESC kills background music and, IIRC, GIF animations.

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    11. Re:Wha... by flakac · · Score: 1

      "autonomyously"? Your groovitude is certainly showing...

      I'm assuming that you meant "autonomously", but unfortunately even that doesn't make sense here. Autonomously implies that it works and functions as an agent independently -- mail arrives and Outlook automatically opens itself and chooses to play the file attached to the email, and just because it chose to do so. Now, if you'd said "automatically", that might have made more sense.

    12. Re:Wha... by Firefly1 · · Score: 1

      Just so long as it's a good piece of music, as distinct from the typical 'elevator/on-hold' variety.

      --
      - White Knight of the Order of Mihoshi Enthusiasts
    13. Re:Wha... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Number of complaints about spelling in my first 45 or so posts to slashdot: 0 Number of complaints about spelling since I've dropped spell checking each one: 3 I really need to look at this data more carefully.

    14. Re:Wha... by Entropius · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm just glad it's midi music--midi is a separate mixer channel and can be killed without muting the mp3 player.

      Once everyone gets broadband and they use background mp3's or oggs... bah.

    15. Re:Wha... by ssimpson · · Score: 1

      ...But I don't think...

      Maybe discussing security isn't the right place for you to not be sure about something? Maybe you could check with Microsoft and tell us all definitively that IE does indeed use DirectShow to play MIDI files.

      --
      "Mary had a crypto key, she kept it in escrow, and everything that Mary said, the Feds were sure to know."
    16. Re:Wha... by johnnyb · · Score: 1

      Actually, Windows is very componentized. It would be surprising if it wasn't.

    17. Re:Wha... by Tackhead · · Score: 1
      > That's the kicker. I know a LOT of sites that do this. A couple of financial services sites I frequent have Registered Reps that seem to think a MIDI that runs in the background lends "ambiance" or some such to their site. They INSIST on it.

      Financial services sites do this kind of crap too?!? Geez. Fucking lame. If you're at liberty to name them, please do, so I know where not to do business.

      "If I want your fucking website to make noise, I'll rub my finger on the fucking screen."

    18. Re:Wha... by IIRCAFAIKIANAL · · Score: 1

      doesn't seem to work anymore. You have you use animated gifs of letters or flash to make blinking text these days.

      --
      Robots are everywhere, and they eat old people's medicine for fuel.
    19. Re:Wha... by RebelWebmaster · · Score: 1

      true.dat :) That scenario is something I hadn't thought of.

    20. Re:Wha... by eckythump · · Score: 1
      yup, the microsoft security diplomat is out and out lying. didnt someone else mention that midi files playing automatically in webpages is only because ie has some bground sound tag which is not w3c html

      here is proof that microsoft is directly lying.. .

      Now we've managed to give microsoft the reputation that they are inept... now lets give them the reputation that they are lying and manipulative mofos, start by widely publicising this example... dude the guy is clearly fucking lying... ok, put the question to him... he's from "Microsoft's Security Response Center" he is their chosen voice. I just dont believe that that isnt an intentional lie.

    21. Re:Wha... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...autonomyously...

      Did you mean autonomously? Or automatically? Or anonymously? Just curious...cause I think you meant automatically through context, but the closest by spelling is autonomously, and I'm pretty sure you didn't mean idependently of user interaction (because if you're nowhere near your computer, and you have nothing running, and nothing scheduled, IE isn't just going to open itself) and I'm pretty sure your computer isn't governing itself...also, if you mean 'as in the action of an automaton', well, that would be every single thing your computer did...whether you told it to or not. I won't even cover anonymously...cause unless you name your computer... Well, to sum up: big words are more impressive when used correctly.

    22. Re:Wha... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "If I want your fucking website to make noise, I'll rub my finger on the fucking screen."

      Oh man! That's freaking hilarious! If I was allowed mod points I'd give you however many I could give. Thanks for making me laugh out loud at work....I like people to think I'm slightly crazy. It helps in my job.

    23. Re:Wha... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good music will almost certainly offend someone.

      Elevator or 'on-hold' music is typically non-offensive, and hated equally by everyone.

  11. Downloaded the patch this morning. by wayward_son · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Windows Update on Win2k Pro told me of the problem before Slashdot.

    It's already been fixed on my machine.

    1. Re:Downloaded the patch this morning. by mofochickamo · · Score: 1
      Ditto. XP at home and office also picked this up.

      /. posts so many Windows security vunerabilities that I could unsubscribe and get much of the same content from my Windows updater.

      And no, I'm not writing this post with IE ;)

      --
      Honk if you're horny.
    2. Re:Downloaded the patch this morning. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess you run windows update daily, good idea. In fact, I'd run it every 5 minutes just to be safe.

    3. Re:Downloaded the patch this morning. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, congratu-freaking-lations for the two of you. And that is insightful how exactly?

      If your best point of pride on Winshit is that it can grab patches faster than /. can report them, um, then rage on I guess?

      Oh, and I'm real glad to know that you are using the 'Pro' version. You must be one too then.

    4. Re:Downloaded the patch this morning. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I second that

      We don't give a fuck about your computer and its updates

      I'm going to go spank it

    5. Re:Downloaded the patch this morning. by johnnyb · · Score: 1

      Really? How can you verify this without seeing the source code?

    6. Re:Downloaded the patch this morning. by I8TheWorm · · Score: 1

      The same way that my users verify that employee information was written to the database. I don't ship source code to my users. As a matter of fact, the vast majority of pc users wouldn't have a clue what they were reading if they saw the source code. Yet, magically, .doc files get saved, e-mails get sent. All without seeing the source code to verify that's what it's doing.

      Of note, most security flaws (Windows, Linux, OpenBSD) are buffer overruns that are overlooked even in peer review/source review. If you're curious about what your MS/OS boxis doing, run filemon/apimon. You don't see anything like GETWINDOWMESSAGE_STEALPERSONALINFORMATION_HERE.

      --
      Saying Android is a family of phones is akin to saying Linux is a family of PCs.
    7. Re:Downloaded the patch this morning. by johnnyb · · Score: 1

      ?????

      " The same way that my users verify that employee information was written to the database."

      No. These people check by simply looking at the results and see if it's there. Without source code, you can't see

      a) if the change was a small local change with minimal impact or a large global change

      b) whether the change only fixed a subset of the available problem scenarios, or all of them

      c) whether the change operates on the symptoms rather than the problem

      "s a matter of fact, the vast majority of pc users wouldn't have a clue what they were reading if they saw the source code."

      They don't need to. They just need a variety of independent third parties to have access.

      Otherwise you're just taking their word for it, and they haven't historically been very trustworthy for anything.

      " Of note, most security flaws (Windows, Linux, OpenBSD) are buffer overruns that are overlooked even in peer review/source review."

      That really has nothing to do with our present conversation. We are talking about what happens after one is identified.

      "If you're curious about what your MS/OS boxis doing, run filemon/apimon."

      Not nearly what you need to verify that a patch works correctly. That's like saying strace is sufficient. It just plain isn't.

    8. Re:Downloaded the patch this morning. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      More proof of how poor parenting breeds cretins - and they don't even have to be from Crete!

      Go spank your monkey!

    9. Re:Downloaded the patch this morning. by I8TheWorm · · Score: 1

      The point was that it's ridiculous to demand the source code for software. Either it works or it doesn't. If it doesn't, buy something else. Hmmm, seems 96% of the pc market is buying Windows... I suppose it works.
      I really have nothing against OSS/GNU OS's/software. Well, except for one thing... branching. In my opinion there are way too many linux distros, which could very well be one of the things keeping the common home pc buyer from trying Linux en masse. Just an opinion, though.

      --
      Saying Android is a family of phones is akin to saying Linux is a family of PCs.
    10. Re:Downloaded the patch this morning. by johnnyb · · Score: 1

      "The point was that it's ridiculous to demand the source code for software."

      But it's not. I promise you that every single trucking company has their _own_ mechanics that know the trucks inside and out and could probably rebuild one from scratch if they wanted to. Almost every car has service manuals available that detail every aspect of how a car is put together. It's not an unreasonable request - in most other industries it's standard.

    11. Re:Downloaded the patch this morning. by I8TheWorm · · Score: 1

      There are many reasons that software development is unlike truck mechanics. When you buy a truck, there is only one way to replace the starter. There is one standard fuel/asparation system for the particular model you've bought. There is no API that ships with the trucks onboard computer however. Where's the source code in that?

      As a programmer, I either write code for someone and it becomes theirs, or I write an app and sell the binaries. When I sell the binaries, I don't feel any obligation to give someone the source code... that would eliminate the income stream I've realized by taking the time to come up with a way to handle tasks that someone else feels is worth purchasing. If someone were to demand the source code (which has never happened in the latter case) I would tell them something along the lines of "no.. if you don't like it buy something else."

      Sorry, I'm in it for the money. I have an urge to eat, wear clothes, and own some sort of structure where I store my valuables and sleep. Luckily, I was born in a capitalist society where all of that is possible.

      --
      Saying Android is a family of phones is akin to saying Linux is a family of PCs.
    12. Re:Downloaded the patch this morning. by johnnyb · · Score: 1

      Two things:

      1) Giving someone source code does not mean that you are licensing it under an open license. Just like when you give them your product (after getting a fee) you are not allowing them to copy it and distribute it. Sure, for home users, this isn't very relevant, but for businesses it is.

      2) There is nothing contradictory with developing open source and money. It doesn't allow particular methods of making money, but there are plenty of others left to choose from. Many have done it in the past and are doing it today. In fact, most consultants give full copyright to the customer, which is even more generous than open-source licenses.

    13. Re:Downloaded the patch this morning. by I8TheWorm · · Score: 1

      >>In fact, most consultants give full copyright to the customer, which is even more generous than open-source licenses.

      Consultant's don't "give" the source code to the customer. They are paid to write the source code for the customer. There's a difference there. Either you make money off of the licensing or you make money off of the time you spend writing it.

      I'm not trying to be a jerk and arguementative, but we're obviously not seeing the whole picture the same way. I'm curious... what methods of income does OSS provide besides Licensing and the honor system?

      --
      Saying Android is a family of phones is akin to saying Linux is a family of PCs.
    14. Re:Downloaded the patch this morning. by johnnyb · · Score: 1

      "what methods of income does OSS provide besides Licensing and the honor system?"

      There are several ways to earn income:

      1) Get a job at a place the _uses_ OSS heavily. Likely that will include making updates and changes.

      2) Get a job consulting. This is like #1 above, but being done on behalf of clients, not your boss. This can also include writing new software from scratch.

      3) Get a job supporting companies using OSS software.

      Often times, companies need to be explained the benefits of the open-source approach for them. I have seen this done successfully many times. The person I work for now had never heard of open-source before I came on board, but now it is one of the major parts of what we do. Chris, the head honcho here, explains to customers how technical people improve on each others work by sharing and helping each other, and that these developers have an implicit access to a larger pool of specialists. Therefore, by releasing what they need under an open license, they have access to specialists, but for the cost of a smaller development company. The tradeoff is that they have to share part or all of what is produced.

      For hosted projects, clients usually don't even care. They don't even ask to see the code. If you use an OSS project wholesale, use pieces, or open-source what you build yourself, they really don't care.

      One thing most people don't know is that the Free Software Foundation was funded in its early days almost entirely from Richard Stallman writing custom extensions to emacs.

      Also, remember, open-source does not require that you post something publicly. Only that, for whoever you distribute, you must give the rights enumerated in the GPL, including source code.

    15. Re:Downloaded the patch this morning. by I8TheWorm · · Score: 1

      I don't know about where you live, but down here in Houston, there aren't any contracts regarding OSS mods that I know of. It's easy to say "get a job where OSS is used heavily," but that's like saying "Get a job where Mac's are used heavily." There just aren't many around. I write MS code because there's plenty of work around. I goof off at home with other projects, but they aren't paying anything. Back to the idea that I like to eat...

      --
      Saying Android is a family of phones is akin to saying Linux is a family of PCs.
  12. Will they indemnify me? by SoTuA · · Score: 5, Funny

    Har Har Har! Yeah, they'll indemnify up to the price you paid for DirectX...

    You have to give M$ some credit though... finally, a security flaw where you don't have to care if you are using Win95a, win98blah, Win2k, Win2k SP1e92, WinXP, WinYP, whatever. A *cross-platform* security issue, if you will. ;)

    1. Re:Will they indemnify me? by PoorCoder · · Score: 1

      Ya forgot something...

      <insert after=win98blah before=Win2k>
      WinMe,
      </insert>

      de dum de dum...

    2. Re:Will they indemnify me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "A *cross-platform* security issue, if you will."

      Oh no, does this mean I have to run the update on my Macs? ...or when you say "cross platform" are you referring to the emotional state of the users?

    3. Re:Will they indemnify me? by SoTuA · · Score: 1

      What?

      You mean there are *other* platforms other than windows? ;)

      (yes, it should have been "cross-platform (nudge x2, wink x2)" instead of cross-platform. It is funny, though, the fact that now you have nothing to envy from WinXP if you use WinME... freedom and equality of bugs, across all windows versions :)

  13. Windows Free by csmacd · · Score: 1

    for over 2.5 years!

    No going back for me....

    Now to get application vendors to support multiple platforms. Ugh. Nothing disgusts me more than a 'server' application that needs to run on 95/98. Yes, this still exists.

    --
    Don't pick up the pho*(@)$*@&@!@ NO CARRIER
  14. Great. by grub · · Score: 5, Funny


    A MIDI overflow? That means no more visits to most Geocities pages.

    --
    Trolling is a art,
  15. A MIDI file? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh, great. Leave to Microsoft to turn a damn MIDI file into a security risk. There is NO justification for a MIDI file to ever invoke code. How long has this exploit been there, before Microsoft had a fix and then announced it?

    Microsoft software - the greatest security know to lifekind.

    1. Re:A MIDI file? by yanestra · · Score: 1
      Oh, great. Leave to Microsoft to turn a damn MIDI file into a security risk. There is NO justification for a MIDI file to ever invoke code. How long has this exploit been there, before Microsoft had a fix and then announced it?
      Active code should be possible to be integrated everywhere, and everything can mimic something totally different (an .exe file can mimic a .wav file, but the system will properly start it anyway).

      That's the idea: Make everything potential harmful. That's the Microsoft philosophy of advanced security.

  16. I gotta hand it to Bill by TerryAtWork · · Score: 0, Redundant

    I'm already updated on this one before I read about it on /.

    --
    It's Christmas everyday with BitTorrent.
  17. If you do use this exploit... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...I would suggest using a MIDI from "The Roots" as I suspect you won't any songs from a group called "The Administrators."

  18. WTF, over by Mikey-San · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Huh? What the fuck does this have to do with BuyMusic.com? The flaw, as the article says, affects MIDI, not WMA.

    I don't like Windows or BuyMusic.com, either, but this flaw doesn't seem to affect BuyMusic.com directly.

    What'd I miss? (Seriously. If I missed something, tell me.)

    --
    Mikey-San
    Karma: +Eleventy billion (mostly affected by watching Celebrity Jeopardy)
    1. Re:WTF, over by MrBlue+VT · · Score: 1

      Don't you know as an anti-microsoft, andi-riaa zealot, you need to include all kinds of irrelevant slights to those afore mentioned organizations. It doesn't matter if they have nothing to do with the situation at hand.

    2. Re:WTF, over by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What you missed was that cryonic*angel is obviously an idiot who didn't understand the technical details of the issue before posting his inflamatory and inaccurate story to slashdot. What you also missed is that slashdot editors encourage these kinds of articles and select them over more informative and well-written submissions.

    3. Re:WTF, over by 7x7 · · Score: 2, Informative

      You missed the Joke. Buymusic.com, in a fit of 1995 zeleousy, has designed the site to detect your browser and refuse to function with anything other than IE.

    4. Re:WTF, over by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong. I followed the link in Mozilla 1.4b on WinXP and it worked fine.

    5. Re:WTF, over by 7x7 · · Score: 1

      That's because Mozilla lies about who it is as a browser. If you visit it with Firebird, Safari, Opera, Konquorer or Omniweb you get the following: Thank you for visiting BuyMusic.com. In order to take full advantage of BuyMusic.com's offerings you must be on a Windows Operating System using Internet Explorer version 5.0 or higher. Download Internet Explorer Here.

    6. Re:WTF, over by kikta · · Score: 2, Informative

      No, it's because he had JavaScript disabled. I tried faking the UA & it still wouldn't let me through. Turning off JavaScript let me in just fine, even with the true UA being sent (Mozilla 1.4). Once you're in, if you reenable JS, it'll dump you to the page you mentioned.

  19. *cough* *ahem* by Scalli0n · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    linux user *cough* *ahem* no need for me to care *cough* *ahem*

    --
    Sig & Below
    Yuck Fou
    1. Re:*cough* *ahem* by ichimunki · · Score: 0

      So then why are you posting? Also: you might want to see a doctor if you are coughing so much it shows up in your posts.

      --
      I do not have a signature
    2. Re:*cough* *ahem* by ichimunki · · Score: 1

      Ah, I've been moderated down for simply asking why you feel the need to inform us that you don't care! So I'll try again, only maybe with a bit of attempted humor...

      Commodore-64 user *sneeze* *burp* no need for me to care *sneeze* *burp*

      See how much fun it is to include bodily function sounds in your posts? :)

      --
      I do not have a signature
  20. Another another? by porksodas · · Score: 0

    Just when you thought it was safe to start buying music from BuyMusic, another another Windows security flaw is found

    Is Michael making a subtle reference to the vast amount of security flaws being found in Windows?

    Or did he proofread this news item with his eyes closed again?

  21. 'just cuz i had to look it up... by sporty · · Score: 2, Informative

    For those who couldn't infer the word..

    Indemnify -

    Main Entry: indemnify
    Pronunciation: in-'dem-n&-"fI
    Function: transitive verb
    Inflected Form(s): -fied; -fying
    Etymology: Latin indemnis unharmed, from in- + damnum damage
    Date: circa 1611
    1 : to secure against hurt, loss, or damage
    2 : to make compensation to for incurred hurt, loss, or damage

    --

    -
    ping -f 255.255.255.255 # if only

  22. Re:SCO insiders sell, sell, sell. by Knife_Edge · · Score: 3, Funny
    It sucks, doesn't it, how slashdot ignores the important news when it's even slightly contraversial.

    Yeah, I wish slashdot would pick up on this whole SCO thing. I cannot understand why SCO is being completely and uttely ignored here.

  23. Downplay by Winterblink · · Score: 3, Insightful
    "They'd have to come up with some way to get the user to click on that file," said Stephen Toulouse of Microsoft's Security Response Center, noting that default security settings in recent versions of Microsoft Outlook e-mail software and the Internet Explorer Web browser prevent automatic launching of such files.

    I love how they downplay that, like it's such a stretch to get a user who doesn't know any better to click a link in an email or webpage. Hell, my father just agrees to every ActiveX install that happens to come up on his screen, and clicks on any banner ad saying he's got a potential security risk on his computer. Irony is a harsh mistress indeed.

    --
    "I'm a leaf on the wind. Watch how I soar."
    -Hoban Washburn
    1. Re:Downplay by figleaf · · Score: 1

      Solution: Install whatever required software youreself & Just don't let your father be an administrator on his machine.

    2. Re:Downplay by spydir31 · · Score: 1

      he doesn't even have to click it, IE autoplays bgmusic tags

    3. Re:Downplay by sithlord2 · · Score: 1


      I thought MIDI files where handled by the Standard MIDI Mapper by default, not by DirectMusic.
      However, I could be wrong...

      --
      ...You are over-qualified and under-paid. If we give you a raise, we will break the cosmic balance of the universe.
    4. Re:Downplay by spydir31 · · Score: 1

      There isn't any mention of DirectMusic in EEye's advisory, but of QUARTZ.DLL, which supplies a common interface for MIDI.

    5. Re:Downplay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's you dad's fault he's a complete moron, not Microsoft's. If you intend to blame a company for the stupity of it's products users then you yourself are also a moron.

      Therefore, by using deductive logic, your family must genetically be morons. kthxdie.

    6. Re:Downplay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Irony is a harsh mistress indeed.

      I thought that was the moon.

  24. Why was there no mention of the RPC flaw? by burgburgburg · · Score: 3, Interesting
    The Last Stage of Delirium Research Group (LSD) has announced and Microsoft has confirmed and released patches for a critical flaw in the RPC Interface implementation in all recent versions of Windows. This includes NT 4.0, 2000, XP and Server 2003 (regardless of the service packs installed). As reviewed in this TechTarget article, the exploit creates a buffer overflow that could allow remote attackers to run commands with the highest system privileges. Applying the new patch and/or blocking port 135 (turned on by default on many Windows systems) are the solutions.

    LSD has produced two proof of concept exploit codes (which they have not released)which they were able to get to work even with Server 2003 and it's new buffer overflow prevention mechanism. The nature of the flaw makes it ripe for exploitation by a worm.

    As discussed here, the reports are unusually embarrassing as they affect Server 2003, Microsoft's most powerful and safest software yet. It is ironic that the announcement comes one day after the Homeland Security Department announced that it awarded a five-year, $90-million contract for Microsoft to supply all its most important desktop and server software for about 140,000 computers inside the new federal agency.

    1. Re:Why was there no mention of the RPC flaw? by verbot · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Perhaps it wasn't mentioned because it was already announced and discussed last week?

    2. Re:Why was there no mention of the RPC flaw? by IIRCAFAIKIANAL · · Score: 1

      Wait, the US Homeland Security Department is running Windows?

      HA HA ha ha he hee ha HA ha HA HA ha ha he hee ha HA ha HA HA ha ha he hee ha HA ha

      <wheeze>

      heh ha he ha ha ha ho hooooo

      <cough>

      Holy shit, the USA is fucked.

      --
      Robots are everywhere, and they eat old people's medicine for fuel.
    3. Re:Why was there no mention of the RPC flaw? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Holy shit, the USA is fucked.

      Only if the UN's wet dreams come true.

  25. Lunix dosent even support midi files by anonymous+coword · · Score: 0

    Go to a site with midi files, get the following error

    Unable to open /dev/sequncer/. No such file or directory. Ive tried it on all three of my computers. on about eight differant distros, and it supports NO MIDI.

  26. Nice System My Ass by nurb432 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So, what did the patch automatically break for you.

    What EULA change did it automatically agree to for you?

    Oh, and dont forget the option of faking out your machine and letting it automatically download a trojan..

    Automatic NOTICES are a good thing, automatic INSTALLS are not..

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:Nice System My Ass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Automatic NOTICES are a good thing, automatic INSTALLS are not..

      You probably don't know this but, Windows XP allows you choose notice only, download (but don't install) and notice, or download and install. Mine is set to notice only.

    2. Re:Nice System My Ass by iainl · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "Automatic NOTICES are a good thing, automatic INSTALLS are not.."

      Automatic notices are the default option, if memory serves. Certainly, thats what my XP Home machine is set to do. You can choose to have automatic install should you wish, but you don't have to. I left it on notify only, not because I find their EULA notices scary, but simply because I didn't want it deciding that I really shouldn't check my 3 items of email over a 56k connection without installing 20Mb of patches for unrelated things first.

      --
      "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
    3. Re:Nice System My Ass by radish · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Not wanting to (a) feed a troll or (b) get flamed to death, but...

      So, what did the patch automatically break for you.

      On my machine? nothing.

      What EULA change did it automatically agree to for you?

      None, you can't "automatically" agree to an EULA change, by definition it would be invalid.

      Oh, and dont forget the option of faking out your machine and letting it automatically download a trojan..

      Yuh, cos Microsoft have never heard of code signing have they? Jeez, surely you can come up with something better than that.

      Automatic NOTICES are a good thing, automatic INSTALLS are not..

      Which is why automatic NOTICES are the default option.

      Say what you like about windows, but update is pretty nice. It beats the suse equiv (which I use also) by miles. Debian apt looks pretty sweet but I've not had a chance to try it yet.

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

    4. Re:Nice System My Ass by flea69 · · Score: 1

      In case you didn't know...auto install is an OPTION, you can set up automatic updates to just NOTIFY there are update available, and select which ones you want.

      If you could clarify the trojan thing that would be cool, I don't recall reading anthing about Windows Update being used to download trojans on people's systems...

    5. Re:Nice System My Ass by ElGuapoGolf · · Score: 1

      Dude, I dunno...

      I use SuSE 8.2. When downloads are ready, the SuSE icon in the tray changes color. When I run it, the updates install quickly, I don't have to agree to any EULAs, and I don't have to reboot unless I'm changing the kernel.

      On the other hand, WindowsUpdate itself is nice in that it will upgrade all MSFT software on your system. But the flip side to that is something like Synaptic/APT can do the same thing, just with a slightly less easy to use interface.

    6. Re:Nice System My Ass by radish · · Score: 1

      Then I need to update, I run SuSE 8.0 and it sucks. Half the time it won't even download the patch because the connection to the fscking ftp keeps dying. Grrr...

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

    7. Re:Nice System My Ass by ElGuapoGolf · · Score: 1

      Yes, that was also there in 8.1, but they've really improved it in 8.2.

      A lot.

  27. More technical Info. by PenguiN42 · · Score: 4, Informative

    It would have been nice if the poster posted a link to the actual microsoft security bulletin, which also links to the patch for your particular DirectX. Also nice would have been a link to this article at eEye security, which goes into much more technical information. What also would have been nice is if the poster specified that the attack only affected MIDI files, instead of implying that all downloads of online music were at risk. The link to the random and not-really-related article about Microsoft protecting its users from legal hassles could probably have been left out, as it just confused the issue.

    (Maybe I'm just bitter that my submission of the same story got rejected)

    --
    The following sentence is true. The preceding sentence was false.
    1. Re:More technical Info. by crivens · · Score: 4, Funny

      You'll probably find that your story wasn't sensational enough for it to be accepted, rather than the one that was.

    2. Re:More technical Info. by Xtifr · · Score: 1

      Anyone who knows what they're doing doesn't wait for slashdot to report vulnerabilities (in anything). Anyone who doesn't know what they're doing probably won't apply any patches in any case. So, that leaves laughing and pointing at MS, and chanting "Apple, Apple, Apple" or "Linux, Linux, Linux" as the only reasonable excuse for posting the article. :)

    3. Re:More technical Info. by jcbnetwork · · Score: 1

      Don't worry, this is slashdot. Your submission will probably get posted tomorrow.

    4. Re:More technical Info. by PenguiN42 · · Score: 1

      This made me chuckle -- If I hadn't given up my mod points by posting I'd mod you up funny :)

      --
      The following sentence is true. The preceding sentence was false.
  28. SPIN SPIN SPIN by chill · · Score: 5, Informative

    From the MSNBC article (which is all most people will see)...

    "They'd have to come up with some way to get the user to click on that file," said Stephen Toulouse of Microsoft's Security Response Center, noting that default security settings in recent versions of Microsoft Outlook e-mail software and the Internet Explorer Web browser prevent automatic launching of such files."

    HOWEVER, from the TechNet article on the flaw...

    "If the file was embedded in a page the vulnerability could be exploited when a user visited the Web page."

    Meaning that at BEST, Stephen Toulouse of Microsoft's Security Response Center is incompetent. At WORST he is a lying scuzzball.

    --
    Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    1. Re:SPIN SPIN SPIN by ichimunki · · Score: 1

      And at BEST-WORST he could be an incompetent, lying scuzzball. (they aren't mutually exclusive traits, after all)

      --
      I do not have a signature
    2. Re:SPIN SPIN SPIN by chill · · Score: 1

      A split second after I hit "SUBMIT", I was thinking the same thing!

      I need to start using the "PREVIEW" function!

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    3. Re:SPIN SPIN SPIN by Watcher · · Score: 2, Informative

      Or he's very good at qualifying his statements. Note the article claims he says that recent versions have default settings to prevent automatic loading. In the MS security bulliten, they note that the default configuration of IE running under Windows Server 2003 is not affected due to its higher security settings. I can attest to that one, if you want to browse the web at all without seeing half the content locked off (like css headers, for example), you have to turn off all of the security lockdowns. I wouldn't know for certain about the latest Outlook releases, as I'm not about to test that!

      So, he wasn't a lying scuzzball, he just was very careful with how he couched what he said.

    4. Re:SPIN SPIN SPIN by ichimunki · · Score: 1

      Nah... if the PREVIEW function actually did something useful, like highlight potential spelling mistakes, then I could see using it.

      Hmmmm. :)

      --
      I do not have a signature
    5. Re:SPIN SPIN SPIN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It also means that MSNBC abandon journalism for puffery. The statement is obviously bollocks, but they publish it anyway!

    6. Re:SPIN SPIN SPIN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It also means that MSNBC abandon journalism for puffery. The statement is obviously bollocks, but they publish it anyway!

      What, unlike the rest of the media? Come on. If you got angry every time some media outlet published a statement that's obvious spin/untruth, you'd have an exploded blood vessel in under a week.

    7. Re:SPIN SPIN SPIN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why in the world is the parent modded Score 5, Informative? You obviously did not read the article very closely, or the security notice. He said "Recent versions in their default confirmation", not "all versions". Such as IE 6 under Windows 2003, which is mentioned in the security notice, and is correct.

  29. not the first time by ih8apple · · Score: 4, Informative

    This is not the first time DirectX has had security issues. Here's another issue from a year ago:

    Overview:
    Risk: High
    Distribution: Low-Medium
    Patch available from vendor: True

    Systems Affected:
    Systems having Microsoft DirectX Files Viewer
    xweb.ocx (2,0,16,15 and possibly older)

    Impact:
    A remote attacker may be able to execute arbitrary code with the privileges of the current user.

    Description:
    A buffer overflow exists in the "File" parameter of the Microsoft DirectX Files Viewer ActiveX control that may permit a remote attacker to execute arbitrary code on the system with the privileges of the current user. This vulnerability affects users visited ActiveX samples galery at activex.microsoft.com. Since the control is signed by Microsoft, users of Microsoft's Internet Explorer (IE) who accept and install Microsoft-signed ActiveX controls are also affected. This control was also available for direct download from the web, but can be uploaded on any website.
    The tag could be used to embed the ActiveX control in a web page. If an attacker can trick the user into visiting a malicious site or the attacker sends the victim a web page as an HTML-formatted email message or newsgroup posting then this vulnerability could be exploited. This acceptance and installation of the control can occur automatically within IE for users who trust Microsoft-signed ActiveX controls. When the web page is rendered, either by opening the page or viewing the page through a preview pane, the ActiveX control could be invoked. Likewise, if the ActiveX control is embedded in a Microsoft Office (Word, Excel, etc.) document, it may be executed when the document is opened.

    Vendor Information:
    secure_at_microsoft.com was informed on
    9.May.2002.
    MSRC 1149cb ticket was opened and finaly resolved on 25.Jun.2002
    Solution:
    Apply a latest IE/OS patches available from Microsoft:
    Setting kill bit expected to be included in latest IE Service pack.
    Windows 2000 SP3 and Windows XP SP1 expected to solve this problem.
    Links:
    ActiveX control still available for retrieval from Global Internet "backup copy":
    http://web.archive.org/web/20010410194632/http://a ctivex.microsoft.com/activex/controls/directx/xweb .htm

  30. Yes, nice system by edremy · · Score: 0
    It works exactly the way you want: it does do a notify. You can set it for autoupdate if you want, but that's a (non-default) option.

    On the notify you're given basic info and a web link to exactly what is patched. No EULA change, of course.

    Works better than Red Hat's update, at least in my experience.

    --
    "Seven Deadly Sins? I thought it was a to-do list!"
  31. MIDI by ciryon · · Score: 5, Funny

    Cool, Then you can construct some kind of hacked MIDI keyboard that just plugs into the computer you want to compromise. Press B# three times and you get the admin password.

    Ciryon

    1. Re:MIDI by iainl · · Score: 2, Funny

      "you can construct some kind of hacked MIDI keyboard that just plugs into the computer you want to compromise."

      Now this just has to be the next /. poll:

      Which tune should you have to play to get the admin password through MIDI? Personally, I vote for the Mission: Impossible theme, but I'm sure someone has a better idea.

      --
      "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
    2. Re:MIDI by Jonsey · · Score: 1

      I've got the technology to do that... but I've got one final flaw that needs fixed. My keyboard is incompatable with the exploit, all I've got a Ab s (A Flats) : (

      --
      I assert that my comment is only my opinion, not that of any employer, past, present or future.
    3. Re:MIDI by r00k123 · · Score: 1

      B# is really C. Everyone knows C is completely secure, nub.

    4. Re:MIDI by haploc · · Score: 1

      It's C# that causes the problem.

      Chris.

    5. Re:MIDI by devaudio · · Score: 1

      I would vote for the musical tones from "Close Encounters of the Third Kind".. you know, "doo dee doo boo bah" ;)

  32. Re:Related Linux security flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    rofl

  33. Re:all set by anonymous+coword · · Score: 0

    apt-get install gentoo.

  34. Re:Microsoft software has security flaw... what's by Latent+IT · · Score: 1

    the particular buffer overflow is unusual...MIDI files... who'd have thought???

    Hey, a 208k MIDI file! I bet it's... extra long! =)

    Actually, worse is that IE seems to just play any midi file off any webpage, unless you specifically tell it not to. I can't actually tell if that's vulnerable or not, though.

  35. Win2k solution - you some sort of drone? by DrSkwid · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    solution

    the only solution Win2k should be in is with hydrochloric acid

    --
    There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
  36. DirectX Bloat... by BJZQ8 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I find it amazing that a graphics API update is 11mb...let alone the "runtime" which is 164237 KB...although I don't know how big OpenGL's program was....

    1. Re:DirectX Bloat... by sithlord2 · · Score: 2, Informative


      OpenGL is just graphics. DirectX is a lot more...

      DirectX Contains :
      - 3D API (DirectGraphics)
      - Sound and 3D Sound API (DirectSound)
      - Network play API (DirectPlay)
      - MIDI and music API (DirectMusic)
      - Various drivers for Sound- and graphic-cards)


      --
      ...You are over-qualified and under-paid. If we give you a raise, we will break the cosmic balance of the universe.
    2. Re:DirectX Bloat... by Dachannien · · Score: 1

      The download of the API includes a lot of sample code. For DX8, the "samples" subdir contained almost 100MB of material.

    3. Re:DirectX Bloat... by Edgewize · · Score: 1
      For DX8, the "samples" subdir contained almost 100MB

      ... and thus revealing my major complaint against DirectX: it takes hundreds of lines of code to do the most basic tasks.

  37. simple by Fuzzums · · Score: 1

    the answer is very simple. it's the M$ marketing model.
    make a product first and sell it and worry about the bugs later.
    why would you spend $$$ bedugging something that works while you can wait for others to find the bugs for you. that saves $$$. and look at their market share. this approach works fine.

    --
    Privacy is terrorism.
    1. Re:simple by sithlord2 · · Score: 1


      Yep, and Open Source never suffers from a security bug ?? Gimme a break...

      Bugs are everywhere, in every software package. Deal with it, live with it...

      --
      ...You are over-qualified and under-paid. If we give you a raise, we will break the cosmic balance of the universe.
    2. Re:simple by Fuzzums · · Score: 1

      as far as i know it's not policy in OS to push the product on the market as fast as possible.

      besides. there is a difference. you pay big time for a MS product. therefore you should get some quality in return.

      --
      Privacy is terrorism.
    3. Re:simple by Daengbo · · Score: 0, Redundant

      "Release early, release often?"

  38. Patched by Ageless · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Windows update told me about this and patched me up before Slashdot even posted it.

    Where's Linux update?

    1. Re:Patched by CmdrTacoBannedMe · · Score: 1

      Where's Linux update? umm.. apt-get upgrade up2date etc..

    2. Re:Patched by stevey · · Score: 1
      Where's Linux update?

      http://www.debian.org/security/...

    3. Re:Patched by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      debian:
      >apt-get update
      >apt-get upgrade

      redhat: (i don't have one but iirc)
      >up2date

      and most of the other distros have something just as easy to use.

    4. Re:Patched by chance2105 · · Score: 0

      Yeah, this is a troll (even tho it's been modded up) but I'll bight. This MIDI exploit has been around since Windows 98 -- for FIVE years. In files that can (and are, regularly) put on websites to be automatically played. Even though you got your update via Windows Update, don't believe for a _second_ that they would have announced they found the bug without having a patch. Just because it took Microsoft five years, doesn't meant it takes the millions of computer users that use their software that long.

    5. Re:Patched by advocate_one · · Score: 1

      Where's Linux update?

      Already sorted... SuSEWatcher.

      got a nice little icon in my panel that changes colour if there are any updates from SuSE. It goes amber for bugfixes and ordinary programs updates, and goes red for security updates... automatically logs itself on and check with the SuSE site when I log in on my box.
      It can be configured to do the installation automatically as well, but I do like to manually examine the list of applicable files myself first.
      --
      Donald 'Duck' Dunn: We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline.
    6. Re:Patched by managementboy · · Score: 1

      apt-get and cron? emerge and cron?

      sorry...

    7. Re:Patched by TheRaven64 · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      Where's Linux update?

      There is no such thing as Linux Update, because Linux is not an operating system. RedHat Linux is an operating system, and comes with up2date. Debian GNU/Linux is an operating system, and comes with apt. The BSDs are all operating systems, and come with their own update methods. Windows is (arguably) an operating systems (although some might argue that it should include a C compiler to be classed as such) and it includes windows update.

      To sumarise, operating systems come with update mechanisms, kernels don't. Asking why Linux doesn't come with an update mechanism is like asking why the NT kernel doesn't include a spreadsheet (although don't ask that near any of the emacs team, or they might get ideas...)

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  39. Turn to Slashdot for breaking news! by Call+Me+Black+Cloud · · Score: 4, Informative

    Let's look at the evidence:

    Flaw in DirectX allows code embedded in a malformed MIDI file to be executed on machine (read more)

    Patch from MS available before news "broke" on slashdot

    Article submitter somehow tries to tie this to buymusic.com

    Looks like a case of a rapid fix from MS and a kneejerk editor at Slashdot. How about this spin? "Notified of critical bug, MS immediately issues fix". Nah, wouldn't play to this crowd.

    To answer your question, cryonic*angel, MS won't indemnify you but level headed readers may excoriate you...

    1. Re:Turn to Slashdot for breaking news! by phillymjs · · Score: 1

      How about this spin? "Notified of critical bug, MS immediately issues fix". Nah, wouldn't play to this crowd.

      More like "Notified of critical bug, MS immediately issues fix which will still be unapplied two years from now on most of the affected Windows machines." Fixes for Nimda and Code Red have been around for ages, but guess what I still see assloads of in my firewall logs? Yup, Nimda and Code Red access attempts.

      There are legions of ignorant people using Windows who aren't aware of the holes or the patches to fix them. They don't read new sites that cover that sort of thing in any detail, and they don't run Windows Update with any frequency and may have even disabled automatic updates because they got tired of the friggin' balloon popping up all the time.

      Because of those people, if Microsoft doesn't get something right in a shipping version of Windows, the subesquent patches might as well not even exist.

      ~Philly

    2. Re:Turn to Slashdot for breaking news! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not only did the submitter somehow try to tie this to buymusic.com, the submitter somehow forgot that buymusic sells MP3s - NOT MIDI files. RTFA!!!

    3. Re:Turn to Slashdot for breaking news! by IIH · · Score: 2, Funny

      Looks like a case of a rapid fix from MS and a kneejerk editor at Slashdot. How about this spin? "Notified of critical bug, MS immediately issues fix". Nah, wouldn't play to this crowd.

      New slashdot poll:

      A flaw is announced in MS products, what happens next and why?

      a) Microsoft release a fix slowly - that would never happen in open source!
      b) Microsoft release a fix quickly - they must have known about it already and not told anyone!
      c) MS product are a flaw in themselves, recursion not allowed.
      d) They should have implemented CoyboyNeal
      e) Crappy of options/all of the above

      --
      Exigo spamos et dona ferentes
    4. Re:Turn to Slashdot for breaking news! by Troed · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The vulnerability was disclosed to Microsoft on the 16:th of April. I don't know what's "rapid" about the fix appearing today.

    5. Re:Turn to Slashdot for breaking news! by I8TheWorm · · Score: 1

      Who gets everything right in the shipping versions? I can't imagine a world without software patches...

      --
      Saying Android is a family of phones is akin to saying Linux is a family of PCs.
    6. Re:Turn to Slashdot for breaking news! by kikta · · Score: 1
      Looks like a case of a rapid fix from MS and a kneejerk editor at Slashdot. How about this spin? "Notified of critical bug, MS immediately issues fix". Nah, wouldn't play to this crowd.

      While your point isn't entirely without merit, there are a few points you're overlooking:

      1) As noted above, three months does not a rapid fix make.

      2) Having every OS you make vulnerable becuase of a freaking MIDI file??? That's pretty sad.

      3) Microsoft hasn't been too keen on fixing other bugs. Buffer overflows are especially bad coming from them, since they closed down all new development for a period to supposedly get rid of all the buffer overflows.

      4) I took the BuyMusic comment to be a joke, since they went to such lengths to make it a Windows-only solution. Suddenly the phrase, "In order to take full advantage of BuyMusic.com's offerings you must be on a Windows Operating System using Internet Explorer version 5.0 or higher" seems more humorous to some.
    7. Re:Turn to Slashdot for breaking news! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who gets everything right in the shipping versions? I can't imagine a world without software patches...

      I can...but I won't, cause I used up my change of underwear the first time.

  40. Remember the "Kick Me" sign on the back... by Kong99 · · Score: 1

    I get the same feeling while using Microsoft OS's, but my on-line sign says... "Exploit Me"!

    1. Re:Remember the "Kick Me" sign on the back... by pair-a-noyd · · Score: 1

      Users of M$ probably should feel about like the goatse.cx posterboy...

  41. New MS ad..... by snero3 · · Score: 1

    Windows XP, Sharing your Data with the world!!

    --
    It said "windows 98 or better" so I installed Linux
  42. Re:YABOP by BenjyD · · Score: 1

    Yeah, cos everyone knows the best language for high perfomance gaming APIs is Perl.

  43. Re:YABOP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry asshole, had to bite.

    Gaming requires speed no? This flaw is in the DirectX layer used mostly for gaming originally, no?

    Don't know about flaming assholes, but when I need to write something reasonably portable and _fast as hell_, I write it in C (not C++).

    When I'm in PHP, I sometimes get miffed that I don't have pointers, they are slick as hell, are more 'in tune' with how the implementation is actually being carried out, and allow for damn nice optimizations.

    Go back to Visual Basic ace, Micro$oft is calling you.

  44. It's NOT a bug -- It's a FEATURE by ReelOddeeo · · Score: 1

    Maybe security "flaws" in multimedia software are not a bug. They may be a wonderful Quality Protection feature brought to you by your good friends at Macrovision. Paid for by the RIAA.

    Now the RIAA can put poisioned files onto P2P. But instead of just being annoying audio admonishing you not to steal, they can own your computer.

    All they need is for it to be legal for them to hack your computer.

    --

    Those who would give up liberty in exchange for security and DRM should switch to Microsoft Palladium!
    1. Re:It's NOT a bug -- It's a FEATURE by sithlord2 · · Score: 1


      And what has this to do with the orginal story ?

      Oh ! I get it ! Its' your average anti-microsoft junkie talk!

      --
      ...You are over-qualified and under-paid. If we give you a raise, we will break the cosmic balance of the universe.
    2. Re:It's NOT a bug -- It's a FEATURE by ReelOddeeo · · Score: 1

      And what has this to do with the orginal story ?

      It is speculation. It is directly related to the original story.

      If part of a multimedia system could be compromised by the actual media file it plays, then this could be a huge win for the RIAA.


      Oh ! I get it ! Its' your average anti-microsoft junkie talk!

      I'll admit that the notion that Microsoft might actually do this on purpose is all in fun. I don't seriously believe that they have done this.

      But back to my first point, for a moment. Suppose that someone, let's say Microsoft, implemented a system where the media files played could compromise the system? And suppose that implementation were purposeful?

      How is this speculation not on topic in this discussion?

      --

      Those who would give up liberty in exchange for security and DRM should switch to Microsoft Palladium!
    3. Re:It's NOT a bug -- It's a FEATURE by iainl · · Score: 1

      Its a fun piece of speculation, and I'm not flaming you in any way, but if I was going to help the RIAA by intentionally leaving a DirectMedia buffer overflow lying around I sure as hell would put it in something like MP3 or WMA, rather than general midi files.

      How many people actually listen to those things on their home PC?

      --
      "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
  45. WineX? by Laur · · Score: 3, Funny

    Is WineX affected by any chance? After all, aren't they supposed to be recreating the API exactly, bugs and all? Besides, it isn't fair that Linux users have to miss out on all the really cool highly publicized bugs. ;)

    --
    When you lose something irreplaceable, you don't mourn for the thing you lost, you mourn for yourself. - Harpo Marx
    1. Re:WineX? by Nukenbar2 · · Score: 0

      Well, we all still have the great bug of all time, Sendmail.

  46. Buffer Overflows by Baron_Yam · · Score: 1

    OK, 'scuse my ignorance... but why are we still seeing buffer overflow attacks? If I understand correctly, it's just a matter of checking for valid input before accepting the data.

    Hell, I'm no programmer, just a Win Admin, but even I learned to check inputs and handle bad data after the first time I wrote a script that crashed.

    1. Re:Buffer Overflows by sithlord2 · · Score: 1


      No, It's not a matter of "just checking the input". Buffer overflows can happen in every routine that manipulates or analyzes strings.

      In fact, a simple routine like strcpy() in C, can cause a lot of buffer overflows.

      --
      ...You are over-qualified and under-paid. If we give you a raise, we will break the cosmic balance of the universe.
  47. That tears it by rpk · · Score: 1

    It's time outlaw gets(3) . Seriously, shouldn't any data-reading C library function that doesn't have a maximum buffer size parameter be deprecated, or better yet, removed ?

    1. Re:That tears it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It always gets(3) me upset when programs use gets(3).

  48. Picking of nits, I know... by JoeLinux · · Score: 1

    Uhh...I don't know what musical scale you learned, but there is no B#. B# is C.

    Remind me to never be in a band with you.

    1. Re:Picking of nits, I know... by CyberGarp · · Score: 1

      Bzzzzzt Wrong, thank you play again.

      Actually there is a B#. B# is enharmonically equivalent to C on an equally tempered scale. On different tunings this is not true. I routinely see B# written into piano music, especially by Debussy.

      Remind me to never play in a band with YOU.

      --

      I used to wonder what was so holy about a silent night, now I have a child.
    2. Re:Picking of nits, I know... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a joke, hence the multiple 'Funny' mods. Take the flute out of your pussy and get a sense of humor.

    3. Re:Picking of nits, I know... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe not on a violin, but on the piano it's exactly the same...unless you're one of those that tune the thing every time there's a key change...
      I don't know what's more insane, hearing something a few cents out of tune or hearing people talking about hearing something a few cents out of tune...

    4. Re:Picking of nits, I know... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please get your facts straight when you are trying to be pedantic.

    5. Re:Picking of nits, I know... by i_really_dont_care · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but the key is the same. You know like [Return] and [Enter] but the other way around.

      Ah crap. It was a joke (and a good one) anyway.

  49. The MS Security Bulletin Report by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I tried to post the MS Security Bulletin message I got in my inbox this morning here just so you could hear about the bug in MSFT's own words. Unfortunately I was not able to do it:

    Lameness filter encountered. Post aborted! Reason: Please use fewer 'junk' characters.

  50. DirectX? by futuresheep · · Score: 1

    Correct me if I'm just ignorant on this, but how does a DirectX flaw affect an ActiveX control? If it's possible, then fine, call me whatever, but if not, why take the cheap shot at buymusic.com?

  51. "Unsually wide spread"?!?! by thepacketmaster · · Score: 4, Funny

    He doesn't know Microsoft very well, does he? :-)

    --

    --

    Luck is just skill you didn't know you had.

  52. Orginal Post Did Do Auto UPDATE by nurb432 · · Score: 1, Troll

    The parent of this mess complemented the system on the fact it auto UPDATED his pc during the night.

    Yes i realize you can turn it off ( for now.. That option will be eventually revoked. give it some time. ).

    This was a direct comment about the auto UPDATE option he was so glad he had.. it sucks and is bad bad bad bad.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:Orginal Post Did Do Auto UPDATE by iainl · · Score: 1

      Lets try this again.

      You don't turn it off, you just don't bother turning it on. Its not the default option. The default is to only be notified.

      You may think that autoupdating sucks. You have the right to be paranoid if you want to, though exactly how you think that someone can insert an autoupdating nasty thing without being able to make the autonotifying thing sound like something you'd want to install I've no idea.

      But to suggest that you don't like it so it shouldn't be an option is manifestly stupid.

      --
      "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
  53. That's just michael being michael. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Submit anything blasting MS and he'll post it, even if the write-up is completely inane and incorrect. And some people pay money to this site....

  54. I won't EVER be buying music from BuyMusic.... by NetCurl · · Score: 5, Informative

    So after it was mentioned in the intro to the story, I looked at this BuyMusic.com, and read their terms of sale....man, this is a shitty music service...

    Who cares about the freaking security, did anyone read the TERMS OF SALE AGREEMENT?

    Check this out:

    Content Use Rules. All downloaded music, images, video, artwork, text, software and other copyrightable materials ("Content") are sublicensed to End Users and not sold, notwithstanding use of the terms "sell," "purchase," "order," or "buy" on the Site or this Agreement.
    Your Digital Download sublicense is nonexclusive, nontransferable, nonsublicenseable, limited and for use only within the United States.
    End users may play the Digital Downloads an unlimited number of times on the same registered personal computer to which the Digital Download is originally downloaded.


    So are you saying I don't actually own what I'm "buying" on their site?

    How can you unlicense your computer too? So if I get a new machine, I lose all my songs!? I couldn't find any mention of switching "primary computers" so that I can keep my music when I upgrade my machine. What about the next time I have to install a fresh version of XP over my current install? Has anyone checked out this service?

    --

    It's only when we've lost everything, that we are free to do anything...

    1. Re:I won't EVER be buying music from BuyMusic.... by forgoil · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It is simply not worth it. You only lease it (can they even stop you from listening to them songs at their whim?), you get it in WMA (Why?) probably with some DRM slapped on.

      If I buy a CD (which I won't, because they are too expensive nowdays, I own about 600 of them thus far though) I can play it in my computer (technically my old stereo), in my surround system, in my car, in mine or my girlfriends portable CD player, at work, or at a friends place.

      If I could buy the music legally in high quality ogg format, and then put it whereever I want (except trading to people) I would be happy. Very much so even. It would appeal to my sense of fairness (yes they made the music, I should pay them and not pirate) and my laziness (*burn* and it goes into the car).

      Hell, wasn't OGG even made just for this? When are they going to stop thinking about the tech stuff and give ogg some more uses than for us hackers?

      On another note, I have patched all the windows computers I use before this story came on slashdot and I don't find this worse than a new Linux kernel corrupting the filesystem. This is a piece of non news!

    2. Re:I won't EVER be buying music from BuyMusic.... by realdpk · · Score: 1

      I wonder if airlines will be expected to enforce that "use only within the United States" clause?

      "Are you transporting livestock or BuyMusic wma's today?"

    3. Re:I won't EVER be buying music from BuyMusic.... by brlancer · · Score: 1
      So if I get a new machine, I lose all my songs!? I couldn't find any mention of switching "primary computers" so that I can keep my music when I upgrade my machine. What about the next time I have to install a fresh version of XP over my current install? Has anyone checked out this service?

      I used to deal regularly with Windows admin stuff, and people would rip their CD's using Windows Media Player; if something broke and we had to reinstall their machine, they had to rip all their CD's over again because the files were encoded with info for that specific computer.

      This is nothing new. [insert rant about commercial music]

      All of these DRM attempts will fail because they are not easy--people went out and bought CD's and DVD's when they owned it on tape because it was easy (and they're chumps). Until someone comes out with a format that allows meets in the middle (allows fair use while stifling piracy), the ideas will fail.

      --
      Someone asked if I had patched against MSBlast; I said yes, I installed Linux.
    4. Re:I won't EVER be buying music from BuyMusic.... by NetCurl · · Score: 1

      I havent used the iTunes Music Store at all, but I think it seems to be FAR superior to this BuyMusic.com implementation. I saw a demo at one of the Apple Stores, and you can deauthorize, and re-authorize any computer. It makes it pretty easy, I'd imagine, to reinstall the entire OS and software, and just pick right up with your purchased music. Has anyone used both services that could provide a head-to-head comparison?

      --

      It's only when we've lost everything, that we are free to do anything...

    5. Re:I won't EVER be buying music from BuyMusic.... by trudyscousin · · Score: 1

      "can they even stop you from listening to them songs at their whim?"

      Under this scheme, the only thing that would stop you is if a given WMA file had an expiration date. Otherwise, as long as you have a license to play the files on your computer, you're golden.

      "you get it in WMA (Why?)"

      Because of record companies' insatiable need for control, and because Microsoft pandered to that need.

      "If I could buy the music legally in high quality ogg format..."

      Nothing I've heard or read suggests that anyone's going with ogg anytime soon.

      "...and then put it whereever I want (except trading to people)..."

      In five months' time, assuming Apple keeps its promise of a Windows version of iTunes Music Store, you can have your music in high quality AAC format (okay, so it's not ogg), with DRM so loose it's almost unnoticeable.

      Your ability to play your music won't be revoked, either by expiration or non-payment of a subscription fee, and you can count on this for every track you purchase from iTMS. You're limited to three computers, but that's two more than I've seen in any Microsoft scheme. Your restrictions in burning tracks (limited to ten) lies not in the tracks, but in the playlists you create that tell iTunes what to burn. When a playlist is "used up," you simply create another. You're not even stuck with the protected tracks you buy - iTunes allows you to convert them to unprotected AAC or mp3. Of course, you lose quality through the conversion, but at least you still have that option.

      No, it's not Kazaa or 'tella, and it's not ogg, but given that iTMS has also got a good selection (no, there's no Madonna, 'Peppers, or Metallica, but that's only because they're all nimrods who won't play nice with anyone) it's about as good a deal as you can get for a pay service. Have patience.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, write technology blogs.
    6. Re:I won't EVER be buying music from BuyMusic.... by Xyde · · Score: 1
      Mod me as a troll if you like, but what's so special about ogg?

      Hardly anybody outside of /. has ever heard of it, it doesn't have any momentum, it doesn't have DRM support (there is no way even in your wildest dreams that RIAA member companies will allow unrestricted song downloads without any form of copy protection)

      You say it sound better - at 64kbps, yes, but all modern formats at 128kbps are pretty much even. (WMA, AAC, OGG etc)

      Yes, it's free, but when you're paying $1 per track, the encoder license is a drop in the ocean for buy.com/iTMS in the grand scheme of things. Ogg vorbis is nice, but it's only slightly less obscure than musepack.

      I'm all for open standards/open source, but IMHO ogg is the answer to a question nobody asked. At the very least it would need to support some form of DRM no even be looked at by any major company for music distribution online.

      Did I mention how few portable devices support it?

    7. Re:I won't EVER be buying music from BuyMusic.... by forgoil · · Score: 1

      I like iTunes, it is good. My only concern there would be possible players for AAC, but I am sure it will be fixed. The best would be if iTunes for windows will make it possible to download the AAC to an iPod as well (I am under the impression that you will have to have a mac for that right now).

      The biggest reason I care ogg is for the lack of patents etc.

    8. Re:I won't EVER be buying music from BuyMusic.... by forgoil · · Score: 1

      A very valid question. There isn't much actual need for ogg right now. Even though 128kbps mp3s don't sound good, it is good enough for what most people listen to, their equipment, and their ears. It's the same with DD and DTS (Every DVD I have with DD and DTS sounds better in DTS, and I don't have neither good ears nor good equipment). I personally would want very high bitrate oggs with 24-bit/96khz. This would put it above CD quality, which is the minimum of what I want.

      But ogg was on the other hand developed just for what iTunes and buymusic is doing, so I am curious of why the people who shelled out the money (few of us are rich enough to develop software for nothing to make other profit from) aren't trying to make use of their investment and spreading the use of ogg.

      Ogg the format is good, the support for it sucks. Ask the ogg people why.

    9. Re:I won't EVER be buying music from BuyMusic.... by trudyscousin · · Score: 1

      Well, yeah, right now, but if Apple makes iTMS work the same way on Windows as it works on Macintosh, then here's what you can expect (assuming you go with an iPod - I have no idea what other makers will do with regards to AAC):

      iTunes (the software you'd run that facilitates iTMS) downloads the tracks you buy from iTMS directly to your computer. They become a part of the entire library on your computer. Within the library, there's no distinction made based on whether you bought your tracks or ripped them yourself or downloaded them from other sources. There's also no distinction made whether they're AAC (protected or not) or mp3 or WAV or AIFF. (Perhaps ogg will join those choices one of these days - they shoehorned AAC in easily enough.) On both the computer and the iPod, they all play transparently, regardless of those factors.

      Synchronization is the default way of transferring tracks to an iPod. This occurs when you connect an iPod to your computer. If you've added any tracks to your library, they'll appear on your iPod. If you've deleted them from your library, they'll disappear from your iPod. Same thing if you've re-ripped your tracks or otherwise modified them. iTunes gives you the option of changing that default behavior.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, write technology blogs.
  55. Not just bloated, but tone deaf too! by Demodian · · Score: 1

    Now if Microsoft could just get their phone support personnel to sit there and study code fragments (like the chunks of radio data from Seti@Home), they might be able to use the free time between the Umm's and Ahh's to catch more of their problems.

  56. Quick poll - this affect anyone? by iainl · · Score: 1

    I don't know about you (which is why I'm asking), but does anyone here seriously still have the ability to have Internet Explorer play MIDI files off web pages turned on? Why would you do that?

    I've never met a page where its been anything other than horribly annoying, but then I so rarely use a browser that hasn't got it turned off that I don't tend to look for them.

    Its like trying to browse through a website sitting next to someone whose mobile phone keeps going off - eurgh!

    So, can anyone list a site that actually gains something from this horrible phenomenon?

    --
    "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
    1. Re:Quick poll - this affect anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does anyone here seriously still use Internet Explorer? Why would you do that? It's not only a fucking wad of shit, it's also very easily replaced by something better.

    2. Re:Quick poll - this affect anyone? by iainl · · Score: 1

      Quoth the Coward, "Does anyone here seriously still use Internet Explorer? Why would you do that?"

      Err, because we can't all be bothered to install a second browser on all our work PCs when Microsoft made sure you can't get the disk space back on the one you wouldn't use any more, obviously. Its not great, but it usually works.

      --
      "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
  57. A gift of esteem, dear troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Some amusing reading while getting your ass stiched back on

    Zoo keeper mauled to death 'after defecating on tiger'

    A young Chinese tiger keeper has been mauled to death after apparently trying to defecate on one of his big cats.

    The 19-year-old appears to have climbed the railings of the Bengal tiger cage and pulled his trousers down.

    Evidence at the scene of the death at the Jinan animal park included toilet paper, excrement and a trouser belt.

    Zoo officials think Xu Xiaodong either slipped into the cage or was pulled in by one of the four angry tigers.

    According to the South China Morning Post, the man told a co-worker he needed to go to the toilet but police were called when he failed to return.

    They found his body lying on the ground surrounded by tigers. The teenager had reportedly been bitten in the neck and was covered in blood.

    Police believe Xu climbed the wall of a partially constructed building used to raise the tigers to relieve himself. They said the smell probably caused the tigers to pounce.

    You can see more stories about tigers and zoos on Ananova, or read our Animal attacks file.

    Story filed: 18:07 Thursday 22nd February 2001

    Check for more on:
    Animal attacks
    Bad taste
    Tigers
    Zoos
    China
    World

  58. Re:YABOP by molarmass192 · · Score: 1

    I beg to differ. It's lazy f---s who don't know how to code properly that shouldn't try to code in C. Don't blame the language, C was never intended to be a 4G language. Range checking is easy, and if someone is too friggen lazy to do it, they deserve to be whipped. Hell, just use the 'n' function variants and C does most of it for you. As for punishment, I think they should be FORCED to program in COBOL, and on punch cards to make it really hurt.

    --

    Good people do not need laws to tell them to act responsibly, while bad people will find a way around the laws-Plato
  59. Windows Update by JAZ · · Score: 3
    I just tried to run windows update.
    I haven't run it since I built the computer 6 weeks ago, but here is the text of the page I got:

    Windows Update is the online extension of Windows that helps you get the most out of your computer.

    Windows Update uses ActiveX Controls and active scripting to display content correctly and to determine which updates apply to your computer.

    To view and download updates for your computer, your Internet Explorer security settings must meet the following requirements:

    Security must be set to medium or lower
    Active scripting must be set to enabled
    The download and initialization of ActiveX Controls must be set to enabled
    Note These are default settings for Internet Explorer.

    To check your Internet Explorer security settings

    On the Tools menu in Internet Explorer, click Internet Options.
    Click the Security tab.
    Click the Internet icon, and then click Custom Level.
    Make sure the following settings are set to Enable or Prompt:
    Download signed ActiveX Controls
    Run ActiveX Controls and plug-ins
    Script ActiveX Controls marked safe for scripting
    Active scripting

    (c) 2001 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Terms of Use.


    This is funny on so many levels:
    - don't ya'll fix ie security?
    - do ya'll trust ms automatically?
    - ms's default setting are medium or lower?!?

    --


    "Karma can only be portioned out by the cosmos." -- Homer Simpson
    1. Re:Windows Update by radish · · Score: 1

      I have the default (internet zone) set to high security, scripting disabled. Just stick microsoft.com in the trusted zone and lower that to medium - works fine.

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

    2. Re:Windows Update by Phillup · · Score: 1

      Yeah... I always thought it odd that I had to lower the security settings to increase the security of the system.

      Notice how they don't mention returning the settings to their more secure setting?

      --

      --Phillip

      Can you say BIRTH TAX
    3. Re:Windows Update by shamino0 · · Score: 3, Informative
      Yeah, Windows Update requires you set Microsoft to medium or lower security.

      But how can it possible be otherwise? The whole purpose of Windows Update is to install core system software - precisely the kind of activity that you generally want to prevent any other web site from attempting.

      Of course, I don't think Windows Update should be done through a web browser in the first place. The Software Update facility in MacOS is a standalone program that can't be used for anything other than fetching and installing Apple's software updates. I think such a system is inherently more secure, because it can't be used to access third-party servers that may contain malicious software. (Yes, I'm aware that a malicious proxy server between yourself an Apple can redirect the request, but that's not something I expect to happen very often.)

    4. Re:Windows Update by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Notice how they don't mention returning the settings to their more secure setting?

      Uhhh...you couldn't figure it out? I mean...you go to the same place, and change what you just changed a few minutes ago back. If you need instructions for that, I have some more for you.

      1. Open oven
      2. Blow out oven pilot light
      3. Turn oven to 450 degrees
      4. Place head in oven
      5. Breathe deeply

    5. Re:Windows Update by Ben+Hutchings · · Score: 1

      Yup, this seems to be the way to do it. I still feel uneasy about that, though. Remember when Windows Update got hit by Code Red? Obviously those web servers aren't always kept up to date themselves, so maybe someone could replace some of the patches on them. Besides which, Windows Update is not at all reliable.

  60. MOD PARENT UP by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

    I have to agree FULLY.

    There was some IIS update for Windows XP a couple months back that caused OpenGL to stop functioning on my computer. After uninstallation of the IIS update, OpenGL started working again.

    Trustworthy Computing, my balls. The more things change, the more they stay the same.

    --
    Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    1. Re:MOD PARENT UP by Latent+IT · · Score: 4, Funny

      After uninstallation of the IIS update, OpenGL started working again. Trustworthy Computing, my balls.

      It is trustworthy! You can trust it not to work!

      Ba-dum-bup! (rimshot)

      Thanks folks! I'll be here all week! Try the veal!

    2. Re:MOD PARENT UP by Cat_Byte · · Score: 1

      The last Redhat update for the kernel left my kernel boot totally fried and I had to roll back to the old kernel. Is this the improvement you speak of?

      --
      Two roads diverged in a wood, and I - I took the one the bus load of girls just went down.
    3. Re:MOD PARENT UP by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      I spoke of an improvement?

      Or RedHat?

      *looks over shoulder*

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    4. Re:MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At least when the kernel gets fried you don't have to redo the machine. (Granted you can in XP, but its not even close to as easy)

  61. Another direct x vulnerability by m00nun1t · · Score: 1

    The classic Coffee Cup exploit

    1. Re:Another direct x vulnerability by pair-a-noyd · · Score: 1

      Huh?? I don't get it??
      Maybe I have my Konqueror browser configured wrong to take advantage of the free offer??

      Thanks.. :-/

  62. lucky by dmnic · · Score: 1

    good thing Windows 2000 w/ DirectX 8.1 is NOT on the list of affected configurations

  63. :Actually its been known for a long time ago, but by ratfynk · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Actually its been known for a long time, but the software writers just have to put up with it, use DirectX or your midi interface will not work, or worse still it might until some user goes and loads the newest MS DirectX. So you play along with the DirectX game or your software will not work. The usual MS bullshit.
    DirectX controls have been a problem in music notation software for years.
    Maybe now someone will write a real piece of music notation software that doesn't use f'ing midi timing to set note placement. One of my main peeves with commercial notation software.

    I have seen the possibility that midi could be used as a hack for years! In fact a little friend of mine has used this exploit to demonstrate a flaw in the whole concept of midi as a scripting control. He has written a replacement algorythm that directly generates wave at the processor level and then sends it to the sound card without the use of shitty DirectX. DirectX sucks for security and flexability always has and always will, because of its fork processes. I personaly do not care if my notation software can make sound, so I just have to put up with useless junk midi. Read my journal entry about more music #32862

    --
    OH THE SHAME I fell off the wagon and use sigs again!
  64. WTF by pjdepasq · · Score: 1

    What the hell does BuyMusic have to do with A DirectX problem? I must be losing it....

    1. Re:WTF by thebatlab · · Score: 1

      It appears the flaw affects the MIDI parts of the DirectX library. Maybe buymusic has MIDI files for sale? Why, I don't know. Other than that, I don't see any correlation but maybe I missed something

  65. Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I /\/\
    \ /
    \/ Windows

    1. Re:Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I /\/\ Windows \ / \/

    2. Re:Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I /\/\ Windows
      \ /
      \/

    3. Re:Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's a shiny little "preview" button for a reason.

  66. There's some IP that's worth being sued for... by ivanmarsh · · Score: 1

    Is Microsoft being sued by InterTrust over intellectual property that doesn't work?

  67. windoze? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    yeh billy g sux - I have NEVER come across an exploit when surfin the net on my xp/rh9 dual boot when using linux. This may be because the FUCKING USB MODEM DOESN'T WORK IN LINUX. Let's face it - LINUX SUX

  68. only m$ by 514x0r · · Score: 1

    leave it microsoft to find a way to turn a midi file into a security hole.

    --

    !(^((ri)|(mp))aa$)
  69. Roberta Flack is back by mabu · · Score: 3, Funny

    ..deleting me softly with his song..

  70. OS/2 ... by doconnor · · Score: 1

    I don't think there has been any security problems with OS/2 in the last year. Besides, it is so obscure, who would bother to figure out how to exploit it.

    A new version of eComStation, a distrabution of OS/2, was released May 24, 2003.

  71. People don't care anymore? by MongooseCN · · Score: 1

    Of all these bugs that have been found in MS's products, how many of them have actually been exploited? No one seems to care anymore. Until some real disastor strikes, like a virus that actually deletes files and trashes a system, few people are going to care about these patches.

    I'm waiting for the 911 of computer attacks to happen so people realize how bad these security holes are in MS. I'm not saying that would be a good MS-bashing thing to happen, but with all the vulnerabilities it's just a matter of time.

  72. *Another* buffer overrun? by IWantMoreSpamPlease · · Score: 2, Interesting

    When I was in college for programming, the teachers would *intentionally* try to crash our software, mainly by buffer overruns, if the software crashed, we would fail.

    The class taught us about error checking ond control. Something MS seems to desperately need.

    --
    So rise up, all ye lost ones, as one, we'll claw the clouds.
  73. Again...? by HomerNet · · Score: 1

    I would like, just one day out of the year, to fire up slashdot in the morning and not find news of yet another Windows security hole. This is getting very tiresome, and I wish Microsoft, for all I dislike them, would take some real responsibility.

    --
    I have no tag line
  74. DOS! by Tony+Hoyle · · Score: 1

    MS-DOS hasn't had an exploit for, umm.... years!

    Doesn't mean it's secure though :)

  75. Re:YABOP by dr2chase · · Score: 1

    There is one minor problem with the implied/obvious solution to C buffer overflows. The "obvious" fix is to write that code in Java, but often as not, interesting "Java" functionality is instead implemented with native libraries, which are usually written in C or C++.

    Other alternatives (Lisp, ML, Perl, Smalltalk) suffer similarly -- until we have decoders for all the various formats and protocols written in the safe languages themselves, there's still a risk.

  76. Re:Microsoft software has security flaw... what's by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

    Can't you set the MIDI file as a backround music for a webpage? If so you would not have to make the user click on anything. This could be nasty. What I want to know is WHY DOES SERVER 2003 HAVE DIRECTX!!!!!!
    Isn't DirectX mainly for games and multimedia? Why would a server have it installed as a default? Can you uninstall it If you do not need it?

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  77. Bashdot? by pair-a-noyd · · Score: 2, Funny

    Yeah, I like that. Let's spawn a division of /. called bashdot (b.) where the daily M$ flaws can be posted. That will free up a LOT of /. real estate for important matters like SCO scoops..

  78. Dear Windows Users by Letter · · Score: 5, Funny

    Dear Windows Users,

    <EMBED SRC="h4x0r3d.mid" HEIGHT=200 WIDTH=55></EMBED>

    Yours,
    B. Overflow

  79. DirectX flaw... by barnoble_crane · · Score: 1

    As if a Windows flaw doesn't leave something vulnerable.

  80. Get cracked in stereo! by Entropius · · Score: 1

    Although it probably never happens, the stereotypical script kiddie break-in/website defacement displays some childish "you have been pwned by BobTheLeet" message.

    Now, since it's a malicious midi file that does the damage, you can notify them in full stereo! It should be possible to make crude synthesized speech over MIDI, using combinations of instruments whose spectra resemble various vowels, with percussion for consonants. MIDI cards do vary, but it should be possible.

    Actually, since 1) the first 10-15 harmonics are easily enough to distinguish vowels, 2) midi has 16 channels, 3) the ocarina sample on most midi banks has both a quick attack and is very close to a pure sine wave, you can construct realistic vowel spectra from scratch!

    Now for the greater challenge: how exactly do you pronounce "pwned"?

  81. Sounds like BS to me by jobugeek · · Score: 0, Troll

    There is no IIS on Windows XP. That only comes with the server edition of which there is no XP version. Sorry, try again.

    --
    I'm not drunk, I just have a speech impediment. And a stomach virus. And an inner ear infection.
    1. Re:Sounds like BS to me by CerebusUS · · Score: 1

      Actually, Windows XP Pro has IIS6, but it's limited to just one website.

      Also, Windows 2003 Server is out now, and it is (for all intents and purposes) Windows XP Server

    2. Re:Sounds like BS to me by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      Future IT professional at work. Your technical prowess astounds me.

      Have you ever looked in Add / Remove Programs > Windows Components?

      Oh yeah, there's IIS...

      Oh, and if you would have read ANY of the books out there on Windows XP Professional, you would have seen whole chapters devoted to it, AND it's on the MCP test.

      And here is the update I mentioned.

      Why don't YOU try again.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    3. Re:Sounds like BS to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You Windows types are so cute.

    4. Re:Sounds like BS to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      #find / -print | grep IIS
      #
      #find / -print | grep win.exe
      #
      I'm safe.

    5. Re:Sounds like BS to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In fairness to this guy, XP Home doesn't have IIS. **Please say your talking about Home, otherwise you need to kick your own *ss

  82. Huh? by r00k123 · · Score: 2, Funny
    "DirectX flaw leaves Windows vulnerable?"

    How about: "Windows leaves Windows vulnerable?"

  83. slightly OT-computer question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't want to start a holy war here, but what is the deal with you Linux fanatics? I've been sitting here at my freelance gig in front of an Athlon64 (an XP-3000+) running SuSE for about 20 minutes now while it attempts to copy a 500 Meg file from one folder on the hard drive to another folder. 20 minutes. At home, on my eMac running Mac OS X 10.3, which by all standards should be a lot slower than this PC, the same operation would take about 2 minutes. If that.

    In addition, during this file transfer, KDE will not work. And everything else has ground to a halt. Even pico is straining to keep up as I type this.

    I won't bore you with the laundry list of other problems that I've encountered while working on various Linux distros, but suffice it to say there have been many, not the least of which is I've never seen a Linux distro that has run faster than its Wintel counterpart, despite the Linuxhead's insistence of open-source efficiency. My eMac 1Ghz with 512 megs of ram runs faster than this 3000 mhz(?) machine at times. From a productivity standpoint, I don't get how people can claim that a Linux PC is a superior machine.

    Linuxheads, flame me if you'd like, but I'd rather hear some intelligent reasons why anyone would choose to use a GNU/Linux system over other faster, cheaper, more stable systems.

  84. Midi on a Server???? by dzelenka · · Score: 1

    What kind of a moron would download and play a midi file on a server? This is only a security issue on a server that is used as a workstation too. If your administrator is a moron then you have bigger security problems already.

    --
    Bah!
  85. Or this spin... by gosand · · Score: 1
    Looks like a case of a rapid fix from MS and a kneejerk editor at Slashdot. How about this spin? "Notified of critical bug, MS immediately issues fix". Nah, wouldn't play to this crowd.


    "MS issues quick fix for security flaw - they learned how to quickly patch from the OSS community."


    I have to give MS credit for their recent bout of quick patches. They haven't fixed all the problems, but I have noticed that their turnaround time has greatly improved. If they are able to incorporate some of the better points that OSS has to offer, they can spin the bejezus out of it. Quick patching used to be one of OSS's advantages over MS. Maybe they are learning.


    Nahh, they're still a ruthless, evil business more interested in control and money. :-)

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

  86. What is a good MIDI player that works? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't know why the hell it's so hard to write MIDI players that work right, but it is infuriating. On my son's brand-new Windows XP machine, MIDI's will sometimes start playing very s-l-o-w-l-y on WMP but will usually play at normal speed if you restart them. In the latest Quicktime via Mozilla, MIDI's on my Windows XP will often emit an incredibly annoying screech or hash sound at full volume when you first start playing them, then if you play them again there is no screech. An older WMP on Windows 95, MIDIs often got stuck in the middle or crashed machine, and you had to try different synthesizers to get one that sounded right. All these bugs sound like potential security holes just waiting to happen. This isn't rocket science is it?

    1. Re:What is a good MIDI player that works? by AvengerXP · · Score: 1

      Winamp 2.95? Lots of customizations for MIDI playback in the Decoder.

      --
      Trolls dont like to be Flamebait, because they burn so well. Protect our Troll heritage!
  87. WTF! by mrseigen · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How the fuck did a gaming API ever get enough priveleges in a "modern" operating system to be able to cause any kind of problems beyond resource starvation?

    1. Re:WTF! by TheAwfulTruth · · Score: 1

      You don't know fuck about the requirements of games I guess. You know that on Linux, the DRI (used mostly by games) is the most insecure and most kernel panicking thing on Linux right?

      Oh, I guess not.

      'Tard.

      --
      Contrary to popular belief, coding is not all free blow-jobs and beer. Those things cost MONEY!
    2. Re:WTF! by Kevinb · · Score: 1
      How the fuck did a gaming API ever get enough priveleges in a "modern" operating system to be able to cause any kind of problems beyond resource starvation?

      On the 9x OSes there's no semblance of access control whatsoever. On the NT OSes (including 2000 and XP) practically everyone has the bad habit of running with admin privileges on a day-to-day basis.

    3. Re:WTF! by spydir31 · · Score: 1

      It doesn't, the problem is in the windows MIDI decoder, which isn't part of DirectX AFAIK

    4. Re:WTF! by praedor · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      Doesn't DRI provide a similar problem for linux/XFree86? If not a security problem, then certainly a stability problem. I have had games (in linux) that freeze up X so hard that nothing can be done to recover the system short of a hard reboot. It is not always possible to connect another computer to the system that is locked up so frickin hard and ssh in to fix things (like kill/restart X or terminate the offending program).


      I'm not dissing linux here...it is all I use...but this DRI thing (direct access to hardware) has made me wonder on occassion as well as curse in response to a hard lockup.


      Really, is there no security concern with DRI?

      --
      In Bushworld, they struggle to keep church and state separate in Iraq as they increasingly merge the two in America.
    5. Re:WTF! by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      "How the fuck did a gaming API ever get enough priveleges in a "modern" operating system to be able to cause any kind of problems beyond resource starvation?"

      It'll all become clear to you in a few years when Linux has a gaming API.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    6. Re:WTF! by pavera · · Score: 1

      Only because by default any new user added to the system is admin, and has no password.
      (it used to be better in 2000, but with XP it is all gone to hell)

    7. Re:WTF! by Nucleon500 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, if you have DRI access, you can probably crash the machine. However, you can restrict access to the devices easily. And of course, if you have access to the local X server, you probably have access to the power cord. And finally, MIDI isn't played by the same processes that have DRI.

    8. Re:WTF! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or because it's a gaming system, and large numbers of games simply will not run on user-level accounts.

    9. Re:WTF! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Easy!

      Just like networking, in the blink of an eye, went from something that only a few people bothered with (even corporate environments tended to have standalone pc's in 1992, remember!), to become one of the primary applications, multimedia also went from almost nonexistant to ubiquitous overnight.

      Networking and Multimedia both caught Microsoft by surprise, and they had to very hastily catch up. What you're seeing is the consequences of such haste.

      Also important, is the later phases of the computing revolution happened so fast, that the few players who were ready for the market won...

      Sure there's competition, but, it wasn't at the right time and in the right place.

      Linux, for instance, is still not really showing signs that it will ever have the kind of applications and hardware support needed to really satisfy a consumer. A person who *cares*, will be more than satisfied. A consumer does NOT care. A consumer will NOT bother to locate the NForce2 device drivers and do all the gymnastics needed to make them work with a default installation. A consumer will NOT bother setting up ALSA. Don't even talk to me about DVD players.

      Entertainment is the first, last, and only application for a whole lot of the PC's out there. And the only option that is seriously presented for an OS for these machines, happens to be the same general purpose OS that finds itself on workstations in business offices.

      And yet you act surprised that this happens?

    10. Re:WTF! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's because they are poorly developed and fail to follow the Microsoft guidelines for application development.

      Typically, those games fail to run because they expect unrestricted access to certain areas of the registry (ie: trying to write to HKLM\Software instead of HKLU\Software, etc).

    11. Re:WTF! by Eccles · · Score: 1

      Only because by default any new user added to the system is admin, and has no password.

      It's worse than that. Many commercial programs have no concept of not running without admin access, and there's no easy equivalent of setuid that I know of. So for my daughter to play "Cinderella's Dreamhouse", I have to log her in as admin...

      --
      Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
    12. Re:WTF! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      panicy?

      no
      i830 dri never caused a problem
      and not sure what you mean about insecurity of it
      you run the game with your user account ;) *evil grin*

    13. Re:WTF! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you are talking about distributions then apt-get remove

      if it comes in THE KERNEL?!!! you would be able to disable it in 'make menuconfig'

    14. Re:WTF! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No kidding, I hope that Linux gets a gaming API pretty soon.....oh wait, OPENGL!!!!

      IDIOT

      and its easier to program in, is actually cross platform(and cross language) capable, and runs just as fast or faster than DirectX, but has been proven to scale 10s of times better than DirectX on highend hardware.

      Plus, OpenGL is implemented with layered approach. This means that graphic card vendors can more easily write drivers that conform to a standard AND implement their own wishes and desires. I won't even go their with the difficulty driver programmers have with implementing DirectX in a standard way.

      Next time do your homework you Windows Wuss

    15. Re:WTF! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      last time i checked opengl was a graphics api and didn't include things like support for network gaming and streaming media.

      Next time do your homework McFly

    16. Re:WTF! by dmiller · · Score: 1

      DRI goes out of its way to validate the arguments to commands passed down to the kernel. The design is quite sane, actually.

    17. Re:WTF! by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      "No kidding, I hope that Linux gets a gaming API pretty soon.....oh wait, OPENGL!!!!

      IDIOT"


      OpenGL is not a gaming API. It is simply a graphics API. It does not handle sound, networking, or input devices.

      Idiot.

      "Next time do your homework you Windows Wuss "

      I have, as demonstrated by your total defeat.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    18. Re:WTF! by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      It is not always possible to connect another computer to the system that is locked up so frickin hard and ssh in to fix things (like kill/restart X or terminate the offending program).

      Have you tried ctrl-alt-f1 for a virtual console or ctrl-alt-backspace to kill X?

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    19. Re:WTF! by praedor · · Score: 1

      Doesn't always work since when X hard locks/freezes, it takes the keyboard with it. Have you not experienced such lockups before? No mouse, no keyboard inputs possible?

      --
      In Bushworld, they struggle to keep church and state separate in Iraq as they increasingly merge the two in America.
    20. Re:WTF! by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      Doesn't always work since when X hard locks/freezes, it takes the keyboard with it. Have you not experienced such lockups before? No mouse, no keyboard inputs possible?

      Bugger - I guess I've been fortunate. Maybe it's my old Matrox card/drivers (dri, but mature, open drives), but while I've had X crash, and back in the old days take down my kernel, I haven't had it take my input away.

      I wonder if somehow the magic sysrequest key could be tapped. The old macs had 'programmers buttons' on them - for an out-of-band interrupt - I wonder if something similar could be purchased/fashioned for a PC.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  88. Why is Parent "Flaimbait"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I thought these forums gave an auto +1 mod to anyone who disparages Micro$oft...

  89. mod parent up FUNNY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The five-year old blog entry that refuses to die.

  90. RE:I had to manually update the dozen or machines by tshak · · Score: 1

    Why... oh why are you doing this manually?

    --

    There is no longer anything that can be done with computers that is nontrivial and clearly legal. -- Paul Phillips
  91. Rapid Fix??? by DASHSL0T · · Score: 1

    MS was notified by eEye on April 16th.

    I guess you're right, that is pretty rapid for MS.

    --
    Freedom Is Universal
    Linux-Universe
  92. Some way to get a click... by KentoNET · · Score: 2, Funny

    "They'd have to come up with some way to get the user to click on that file," said Stephen Toulouse of Microsoft's Security Response Center

    Such as a link saying "CLICK HERE!"?

    --
    "You tried your best and failed miserably. The lesson is...never try. Heh!" -Homer
    1. Re:Some way to get a click... by jacbo · · Score: 1
      If, like me, any one uses midi files as
      polyphonic ringtones they are in serious trouble.

      I can see the web banners now

      FREE POLYPHONIC RINGTONES - CLICK HERE

      This isn't a trivial problem, but a very major one.
      A new variant of SQL Slammer could be distributed to
      thousands of people suckerd by free ringtones.

      I'll be spending a lot of nights installing SP3 on my friends PC's.

      jacbo

  93. Windows security hole counter by forgetmenot · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Instead of posting every single security flaw in windows to slashdot (I mean seriously... we KNOW they exist don't we? It's not exactly "news" and there ARE other sites for them) to be flamed to pieces how about just have a little "counter" somewhere on the main page.. along with a date the user can set in his/her settings. Increment it everytime a new flaw is found so that it keeps a running tally. Number of Windows flaws since . Fun AND informative. Sorta.

    1. Re:Windows security hole counter by Pvt_Waldo · · Score: 1
      This reminds me of that old joke which goes something like this...

      This woman calls up the police one day. "Those boys are skinny dipping in the river next to my farm again! I can see 'em from my porch!" she says.

      "OK", says the police man. "I'll go ask them to move." He does so and the boys go farther down the river.

      15 minutes later, she's on the phone again. "I can see them still! I'm up in the second story window!"

      "OK", says the police man. "I'll go ask them to move agani." He does so and the boys go even farther down the river.

      15 miutes later, another call to the police. "I'm up on my roof now and I can STILL see them!"
    2. Re:Windows security hole counter by brkello · · Score: 1

      Sure. While you are at it, let's put up one for Linux and BSD etc too. We can compare how fast they grow. That would be fun to see. I know this may come as a surprise, but open source OS's have buffer overflows too. But joking aside, it would be interesting to have a tally that shows if Linux really does have less of these problems. The only problem would be coming up with a point system because a minor bug shouldn't be weighted as much as one that allows your system to be taken over.

      --
      Support a great indie game: http://www.abaddon360.com
    3. Re:Windows security hole counter by AvengerXP · · Score: 1

      You'd have to categorize by severity to tally points, because this wouldn't be faire. 1 = UI problems, typos, etc., 5 = Critical security flaw. As a base guideline.

      --
      Trolls dont like to be Flamebait, because they burn so well. Protect our Troll heritage!
    4. Re:Windows security hole counter by jpop32 · · Score: 1

      Number of Windows flaws since . Fun AND informative. Sorta.

      I'm keeping a tally of advisories that come through my local CERT mailing list. But, to keep it interesting, I'm keeping a tally on all systems. The current running tab, since 12th of March this year:

      Debian: 76
      RedHat: 51
      MS: 45
      Mandr: 37
      Sun: 36
      HP: 29
      SGI: 23
      TurboL: 18
      Cisco: 15
      SuSe: 6
      SCO: 6
      Oracle: 2

      Fun and informative, indeed. :-)

      You make your own conclusions. This is just information to assimilate.

  94. Service Update Realities by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    The reality is that most times a fix ( regardless of from whom ) contain their own bugs and often break existing applications. Its a fact of life.

    By agreeing to auto update you do in effect approve changes in EULAs.

    There have been some question of the forging of signing of updates. I don't have the exact links here, but it has been discussed, even on TechNet. " don't just assume its from Microsoft " was the jist of the discussion. but if you are set to auto update, you are automatically 'trusting' whom ever claims to be them.. If its automatic it isn't going to ask if you are sure..

    And as a side note, this was NOT a Microsoft oriented statement, I think ANY automatic update from ANY company, be it an OS, an application, free or commercial, has the same implications. ( but the auto notify is a great feature )

    You get a service pack, then you TEST it.. ( and test it again ) you never install it automatically.. Hell you dont even install it unless you NEED it, if you are a responsible sysadmin..

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:Service Update Realities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if you are a responsible sysadmin..

      Who needs a responsible sysadmin for their home system? What kind of fucking idiot are you, anyhow? Do you have a personal mechanic that keeps your car properly maintained? By properly maintained, I don't just mean oil changes every now and then. I mean inspecting hoses, belts and such every day, inspecting tires, lights, and horn every day, rotating tires as advised, flushing the coolant system every year...there are lots more things. if you don't do all that, you shouldn't be given a car. maybe a tricycle. That would suit your apparent maturity level. Perhaps one day you will realize that not only do most people not CARE how or why windows update works, they don't even care IF it works. For most people, their computers aren't the most important companions in their lives. Obviously it's different for you. Gives 'square-headed girlfriend' an entirely different connotation. What's your computer's name?

  95. Sketchy TOS by michaelepley · · Score: 1

    Any transaction that looks like a sale, is described as a sale, and is generally regarded as a sale, most courts are very likely to treat as a sale.

    Merely stating that "this is not a sale" is not enough. Courts can and will look beyond mere form and look to the substance of a particular transaction. Here, like most "licensed" music and software, the substance of the transaction is very similar to a sale. Moreover, the law heavily favors sales as opposed to licenses, unless it is very clear to all parties that it is not a sale. Lets look at the evidence in this case:

    • The service is called "BUYmusic.com", implying that you can BUY music there. The term "buy" commonly mean to purchase and thereby take ownership.
    • The "Terms of Sale" agreement itself calls the transaction a sale in its title.
    • Although I have nothing to prove this, I'm sure the service is advertised as a sale.
    • The use of words like sell, purchase, order and buy, which the TOS admit to being sprinkled throughout their site indictate a sale, unless they are always attached to "of a license".
    • Although not binding, the belief of the purchasing party is relevant, if it is incorrect, fostered by buymusic.com. Contracts after all, require a mutual understandind and assent, which is lacking if the parties have such disperate ideas that one considers it a sale and the other a license (and a very restrictive one at that).
    • Again, I have no evidence, having never used the buymusic.com service. The user must normally presented with this agreement and asked to approve it beforehand, for each transaction. Even if done, seeing "Terms of Sale" only reinforces the weight of the sale concept.

    It seems clear that Buymusic.com's intent is to obfuscate the form of transaction to the average comsumer, thus making one think it is a sale, while Buymusic considers it a license. Not withstanding this provision in the TOS agreement, the substance of the transaction dramatically favors it being designated a sale. At best, the confusion it creates probably runs afoul a number of state's consumer protection laws.

    I suggest Buymusic.com reconsider its policies in this regard.

  96. SP4 products are not affected by this flaw by jeeptj · · Score: 3, Informative

    FYI...

    Windows 2000 machines running SP4 are not affected by this flaw. I suggest anyone running anything less than this starts deploying SP4 instead of this individual patch. Shavlik has excellent products to make your patch deployment easier.

    1. Re:SP4 products are not affected by this flaw by krray · · Score: 2, Informative

      Unless of course you're running AutoCAD Architectural or Mechanical desktops (release 2000 or better) and trying to use StudioViz-3d. SP4 from Microsoft completely CORRUPTS the DATA FILES upon opening them now.

      Ironically ... AutoCAD is one of the only applications keeping the need for any Windows 2000 workstations to even exist anymore in my company. Everything else (servers to workstations) is running Netware, BSD, Linux or OS X.

    2. Re:SP4 products are not affected by this flaw by wastaz · · Score: 1

      Well, then my 2k installation can be affected.
      So be it.

      I would rather shoot myself in my hand, leaving me unable to use a keyboard and doomed to clicking my way through computers for the rest of my life (oh the ultimate horror! O.o) than accept the license terms on SP3 and SP4.

      I guess this only strengthens my resolve to drop windows totally except for the occasional fling with blizzard..Perhaps one should consider supporting transgaming instead.

    3. Re:SP4 products are not affected by this flaw by jeeptj · · Score: 1

      If you don't want to install SP4 on you w2k machines I take it that you're not running anything mission-critical hence the probability of your machines being prone to attacks being fairly low.

    4. Re:SP4 products are not affected by this flaw by pe1chl · · Score: 1

      > FYI...

      Should this not read FYMI?
      It seems like Mis-Information!

      A Windows 2000 Professional system with SP4 will still need the patch according to Microsoft Windows Update. And the DirectX version hasn't changed with SP4.

  97. auto updaters deserve grief by nurb432 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The title says it all ( and will be modded down ).

    If you auto update you deserve all the grief and broken applications you get.

    It has nothing to do with paranoia. its called being responsible. you DON'T automatically changes things because someone else says its new and improved.

    You first see if you NEED the update, if the bug fixes effect you, then you TEST TEST TEST. If it doesnt then you DONT install it.

    I'm glad you don't run any network I'm on.

    And YES i knew it was optional in the first place, the parent of this chose autoUPDATE, thus prompted comments.

    Sheesh.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:auto updaters deserve grief by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ironic, usually it's Microsoft that tells us how we must operate our computers and Linux that gives us a choice. Here it's Microsoft giving us a choice and a Linux user telling us how we should operate our computers.

    2. Re:auto updaters deserve grief by NoCoward · · Score: 1

      "You first see if you NEED the update, if the bug fixes effect you, then you TEST TEST TEST. If it doesnt then you DONT install it."

      Uh, dude. This is my personal computer. I don't have time to see if I NEED to update and then to TEST TEST TEST. I have better things to do than to audit everything. Christ, a computer is just a TOOL to get something else done.
      I do the same thing with up2date for redhat. it works, its great. ITS A NICE SYSTEM.

    3. Re:auto updaters deserve grief by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      Then you shouldn't be computing in the first place.

      Exercise some responsibility, people with your attitude only cause more problems for the rest of us due to your total lack thereof.

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    4. Re:auto updaters deserve grief by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then you shouldn't be computing in the first place.

      Well, it's my opinion that you shouldn't be breathing in the first place. Luckily people have the right to both insecure computing and insecure posting. (note: I didn't use the same meaning of insecure both times. Please don't tell me all about how no one could crack your slashdot account.)

      It's stupid fucks like you that made it so I can't enjoy the intoxicant of my choice, stupid fucks that think they know better than everyone else and can dictate the behaviour of others. Fuck you.

    5. Re:auto updaters deserve grief by iainl · · Score: 1

      "you TEST TEST TEST"

      On what, exactly? You sad, strange, silly little man.

      This isn't enterprise level servers we're talking about, its fucking home computers used for email and the odd game. If it turns out that an automatic update broke my Half-Life I'll use System Restore (which works very well, thanks) to take it off again. Take your moronic attitude elsewhere.

      --
      "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
    6. Re:auto updaters deserve grief by NoCoward · · Score: 1

      I am not "computing". I am using a computer, as a tool, as an end to a means. This isn't 1964 anymore buddy. Go twiddle your bits and leave me alone, I have stuff to do.

      Its people like you who needlessly overengineer things that cause the problems.

  98. At the root of the problem by krinje · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ...is why would Microsoft distribute drawing and music libraries in what is essentially a server operating system? (WinServer2k3) Why these aren't optional components that an administrator could choose to include at install time is a good question, and should be asked of Microsoft.

    The reader with 200 NT/2K boxes to patch would probably be grateful if he didn't have to worry about patching whatever bogus components MS includes by default.

    I say we take 'em back to court and get them to rip out ALL the unnecessary functionality from the kernel.

    --
    "He treats objects like women, man!"
    - The Dude, The Big Lebowski
  99. Re:I had to manually update the dozen or machines by Cat_Byte · · Score: 1

    I had a job where I had to do many updates manually. I blocked windowsupdate and downloaded the "critical update" for Internet Explorer or whatever the update was at the time which measured like 60Mb. Rather than have all users downloading this file over & over via the poor little T1 hosting hundreds of users I downloaded it once & pushed it out. Then I opened windowsupdate back up for use.

    --
    Two roads diverged in a wood, and I - I took the one the bus load of girls just went down.
  100. For being so pro-Linux ... by Chromodromic · · Score: 0, Troll

    ... Slashdot is, without out a doubt, the premiere Windows bug announcement service on the Web. I hear about bugs here before I hear about them from Security Focus.

    Thanks, Slashdot!

    --
    Chr0m0Dr0m!C
    1. Re:For being so pro-Linux ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And nary a Linux bug ever alluded too or even acknowledged... Yet the patches fly faster than MS could ever hope to match. So strange!

  101. Well done Microsoft by enneff · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It's great to see Microsoft treating a threat of this severity appropriately. When I booted up my machine this morning (long before this Slashdot article was posted) I was greeted with a Windows Update message offering me a patch to this vulnerability. I didn't even know it existed! I was able to patch first, and ask questions later.

    My only complaint is that MS seems less concerned with many less severe vulnerabilities. You'd think a corporation of their size would have a whole department devoted solely to fixing all security (and other) flaws.

  102. RISCOS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'll see your DOS and raise you RISC OS

  103. I prefer streaming Real or MP3 by KalvinB · · Score: 1

    www.recycledrussianbrides.com uses pop-under "technology" to have some Russian music I picked up at MP3.com playing in the background. It's full length and only plays once. It also contains an ad with a link to the artist's page. With the pop-under you can go anywhere on the site and it won't start and stop.

    You can easily close the window if you don't like it. At a cookie is set to make sure it only loads once per browser session.

    Embedding music in a page with actual content is just annoying. Every time you click on something it stops, and when you go back it starts again. And if you're not nice enough to display the controls there's little way to make it stop.

    It's not necessarily a bad idea. With proper music and implementation it adds to the site. Most sites fail on both accounts though.

    Ben

    1. Re:I prefer streaming Real or MP3 by Jorrit · · Score: 2, Insightful
      It's not necessarily a bad idea. With proper music and implementation it adds to the site. Most sites fail on both accounts though.

      And what if I'm:
      • at work and not willing to disturbe my collegues.
      • listening to other music (either on computer or my stereo).


      I think music playing without me specifically requesting it is ALWAYS a bad idea. Same as I don't want my browser to open unrequested windows EVER.

      Greetings,
      --
      Project Manager of Crystal Space (http://www.crystalspace3d.org). Support CS at http://tinyurl.com/cb3x4
    2. Re:I prefer streaming Real or MP3 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      completely agreed, to me random windows and music from a website is like a restaurant that puts animal feces on their pizza and tells the patrons to pick it off if they don't like it

  104. Funny thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I followed the MSNBC link and up pops the warning,
    "Do you want to allow software such as ActiveX controls and plug-ins to run?"

  105. WARNING dont Patch!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can anyone trust Microsoft!!!

    They could announce new Services Packs to update Spy tools for the "Gathering agencies" and new Virus!!! Why should I trust micros$ft on this?

    1. Re:WARNING dont Patch!!! by AvengerXP · · Score: 2, Funny

      MS already knows you were going to say that by analyzing your surfing habits. Psh, amateurs.

      --
      Trolls dont like to be Flamebait, because they burn so well. Protect our Troll heritage!
  106. This explains the notes in "Close Encounters" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    They hacked the alien's computer!

    Who knew?

  107. Re:Microsoft software has security flaw... what's by LurkerXXX · · Score: 1

    Why are you surfing to random sites on your sever? I only go to OEM sites to download drivers/updates on my servers. They never see any other web pages.

  108. This is tiresome by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have the free RH Network account that notifies via email when there are security flaws in RH along with patches to fix.

    I get emails almost every week, sometimes several per week detailing these problems along with updates to fix security problems with RH linux.

    Why don't you guys trumpet each and every one of these security problems with Linux with a big stupid headline?

    All software is vulnerable to these problems. I know this is an advocacy site but cmon!!!!!

  109. Re:Microsoft software has security flaw... what's by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

    Since the bug is ALL supported versions of Windows the statment was more about workstations than Servers.
    The Question about DirectX and servers is more along the lines of why in the name of heavens do you have a system for games and multimedia on a server to start with?

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  110. YABOP by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    Yet Another Buffer-Overflow Problem. Sheeesh.

    Why do people obstinately continue to program in C, a pretty stupid language that allows buffer overflows?

    One would have thought that, by now, programmers would have LEARNED to code in order to prevent buffer overflows...

    But, noooo. The egoistical code jocks think they are 1337 by coding obscure and obfuscated C code, and their clueless PHBs let that CCC (Crappy C Code) go by...

    Perhaps everyone who let a buffer overflow error slip by should be COMPELLED to program in COBOL for a year (who ever heard of buffer-overflows in COBOL programs???).

  111. Yo Einstein! by Sxooter · · Score: 1

    Ever been to a web page where cheesy electro synth just started playing? Guess what, you were playing a midi file...

    --

    --- It is not the things we do which we regret the most, but the things which we don't do.
  112. patches don't mean anything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most explots happen a week after a patch has been released because most haxors don't know how the flaw works until they reverse engineer the patch. As you know, most sysadmins and users either fear what patches will do to their (finally) working systems or simply have better things to do than patch windows. Yes, believe it or not there a people running the world that have better things to do than worry about a windows box that plays solitaire and costs less than 0.01% of their annual income.

  113. Sometimes I wonder.... by Tragedy4u · · Score: 1

    If Microsoft developers are overlooking these issues intentionally, all in the name of "job security" but then again it could have the opposite result too....too many bugs in your code and you get axed.

  114. Frequency of Windows Patches by aastanna · · Score: 1

    I have a WinXP desktop i use mostly for games sitting beside a 12" powerbook laptop I use mostly for work. I'm constantly amazed that in the last 6 months there's been maybe 1 or 2 security patches for OSX, while my Windows box gets what seems like at least 1 per week. Makes me worry about even turning on my WinXP box...I wish you could play games on Linux :)

    1. Re:Frequency of Windows Patches by caffeinex36 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Honestly, who the hell wants to hack/0wn an OSx desktop. Wouldnt be of much use to the kiddies....now own 20000 windowsXP desktops and you have yourself something to brag about on IRC. Also, not many people are familiar with looking for vulnerabilities in OSX.

      It's not becuase they are not there...its just nooone is looking for them.

      -Rob

    2. Re:Frequency of Windows Patches by Forkenhoppen · · Score: 2, Informative

      There is Transgaming's WineX, you know. I hear it's pretty good for playing games under Linux.

    3. Re:Frequency of Windows Patches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only on slashdot is truth moderated as flamebait.

  115. You coldhearted bastards! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Can't an AC get a little love around here?!!!

    A "Mod up, funny" or (score:-1, insightful) would have been enough!!!

    sniff...

  116. Babelfish translation: by PhxBlue · · Score: 1

    At WORST he is a lying scuzzball.

    <translate language="Microsoftese">

    At WORST he is an outstanding corporate citizen who is concerned about his customers' requirements.
    </translate>
    --
    !#@%*)anks for hanging up the phone, dear.
  117. as wide spread as midis are.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i expect this will affect maybe 2 people

  118. Bugs Bunny says by N3WBI3 · · Score: 3, Funny

    I should have taken a left a 17.254.3.183

    --
    1. Re:Bugs Bunny says by tapin · · Score: 2, Funny
      I should have taken a left a 17.254.3.183
      Don't you mean 198.182.159.17?
    2. Re:Bugs Bunny says by N3WBI3 · · Score: 1

      Great find! mod up

      --
  119. Re:SCO insiders sell, sell, sell. by blibbleblobble · · Score: 1

    "Yeah, I wish slashdot would pick up on this whole SCO thing. I cannot understand why SCO is being completely and uttely ignored here."

    humorix

  120. Read again by M.C.+Hampster · · Score: 1

    Before implying someone doesn't know what they are talking about, you may want to reread the post:

    The only time Joe Average encounters a MIDI file is on Jane's Shitty Geocities Webpage.

    How's that Einstein? ;-)

    --
    Forget the whales - save the babies.
  121. Re:Microsoft software has security flaw... what's by archen · · Score: 1

    What I want to know is WHY DOES SERVER 2003 HAVE DIRECTX!!!!!!

    It's an essential Windows component, you know... the whole integration thing. Why would a server have a web browser? Maybe people would use one for some reason. Who knows. When you go with a Microsoft solution, you basically take what they give you - you're the one that gives them the power to make that decision when you chose to use their software.

    Besides which a lot of video cards now days seem to require Direct X in order to function at all.

  122. Your assumption by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    I never said what OS I use, or don't use. Don't make assumptions.

    My statements were generic, towards anyone who is that irresponsible with their system, regardless of its source..

    And before you say ' Joe user doesn't understand these issues like trained sysadmin does..... bla bla ' then perhaps they should own a pc .... if they cant at least follow sensible maintenance procedures, give them a terminal instead.. .

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:Your assumption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is Slashdot, of course we make assumptions here. I was merely pointing the irony in your statements.

    2. Re:Your assumption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if they cant at least follow sensible maintenance procedures

      Uh. Yeah. that makes sense. If martha homemaker doesn't use linux and patch everything immediately take her computer away. You know, the one she turns on for 10 minutes a day to check her email, and maybe print a recipe or something. She has no right to a computer.
      Why don't you get off your high fucking horse, dumbass? You didn't pay for her computer, and you have NO RIGHT to tell her how to use it, and even LESS than no right to take it away.

  123. BuyMusic blocking non-IE/Win via JS by Cardinal · · Score: 1
    I'm entering the site completely fine regardless of what browser identification I send. Opera 7.2b2, Netscape 3.0, 4.78, 5.0 MSIE 6.0... All the same... So, er, bullshit?

    Do you have JS disabled? The check is being done in JS, so turning it off will allow non-IE users in. Of course, if you were interested in the truth rather than just assuming the parent was making it up, you could've done a simple check of the page source/headers for signs of redirection.

    It's right there in the <head>
    var mac = navigator.appVersion.indexOf("Mac")>-1
    var opera = navigator.userAgent.indexOf("Opera")>-1
    //IE5+ required
    if (navigator.appName == "Netscape" && !mac && !opera) {
    musicLink = false
    window.location.href="/ierequired.htm";
    }
    Not the first site to be dumb enough to shut out the non-IE/Win crowd, and it won't be the last either. Hell, even MSN's tried it.
  124. As an aside by Vainglorious+Coward · · Score: 1

    Does anyone know whether websites that insist on the vile practice of background music are liable to the same perfomance charges that (eg) radio stations are? It would seem that such music could qualify as a "public performance". It would be nice if the charges were sufficient to dissuade deluded web-designers from thinking background music is a neat idea.

    --
    My next sig will be ready soon, but subscribers can beat the rush
  125. Re:YABOP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Maybe it's because nobody under 40 years old ever heard of COBOL.

  126. oh really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ""They'd have to come up with some way to get the user to click on that file," said Stephen Toulouse of Microsoft's Security Response Center, noting that default security settings in recent versions of Microsoft Outlook e-mail software and the Internet Explorer Web browser prevent automatic launching of such files. "

    well i donyt know if anyone mentioned this but my parrents were quite pissed off and i had to drive all the way over there. this blocking "feature" blocks ALL attachments and has no way to aprove good from bad. you can turn it off of course but that defeats the purpose. also i shoudl note that OE 5.5 still plays midi music files whenever it wants and i have turned all html email off, so im not really sure how it manages that.

    oh now im off to restart my machine after a good week or 2 uptime since the last patch... thanks micro$oft !

  127. Yet another Buffer Overrun problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Given:
    1. This is a stupid programming trick and automatic code inspection tools to catch the majority (many cases cannot be caught this way) of these already exist,
    2. There are solutions to prevent buffer overruns even in poorly written code from compromising the operating system (STFW, there are many white papers out there),
    3. Microsoft has been bitten by these many, many, many times before,

    Then:
    Just what in the fsck has Microsoft's security program done in the last 2 years? This is a known security problem with known solutions and a history of having been a Windows problem in the past. Why in the hell wasn't this addressed in the last two years since Bill Gates made security a prime focus at Microsoft?

    Possible answers:
    a. M$ programmers are incompetent
    b. silly! did you really think Bill's "security initiative" was about anything except marketing press?
    c. M$ really just doesn't give a fsck about the security of your data or your computer system
    d. all of the above

  128. The DRM on BuyMusic's music is essentially useless by mrbrown1602 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    OK, I'll admit - I bought a CD off of buymusic.com (specifically "Gutterflower" by the Goo Goo Dolls) and downloaded the protected WMA files. Most licenses on BuyMusic.com allow you to burn the music to an audio CD a few times (mine allowed for up to 3 burns). So, I burned the album to a standard Audio CD... and then I figured, well, lets try ripping them in CDex and making them MP3s. Worked perfectly - no distortion or loss in sound quality. Time to share these bitches on Kazaa. :-P

  129. How to convert BuyMusic files to MP3 by sstidman · · Score: 1

    I was wondering ... would it be possible to remove the DRM and convert to MP3 by recording your new music file to a CD-RW and then ripping the song from the CD into an ordinary MP3 file? Has anyone tried this? Is some trick employed to prevent this?

    If that were the case, I might actually buy music from BuyMusic.com. I've got no problem paying 79 cents for music I like, but I don't want to have to buy it again later if I change computers (which happens at least once every 2 or 3 years).

    --
    Send/track messages to 100K people: www.xPressAlert.com
  130. Re:The DRM on BuyMusic's music is essentially usel by sstidman · · Score: 1

    Wow, you were answering my question just as I was writing it (see my other post). That's spooky ;p Thanks for your useful post!! If I were a moderator I would mod you up.

    --
    Send/track messages to 100K people: www.xPressAlert.com
  131. Win2K+DX *8.1* = ?! by LittleGuy · · Score: 1

    We have a few Win2000 machines that are running 8.1, so accoring to Shavlik, the DLL is larger than what is anticipated.

    Unless M$ expects to expand the permutations of OS and DX Versions, should I consider my machine safe (stop that laughing!) and this patch not relevant for Win2K+DX8.1?

    --
    Mod Karma -1: I sed bad wurds. If I cep my mouf shut, I wud be at riyses.
  132. OpenBSD by phliar · · Score: 1
    But even OpenBSD has had one exploit now and they play some real funny games to get it down to only one. Bind, fr example, isn't counted because the minimal install doesn't include it.
    Not the minimal install; the default install. This means "clueless newbies" are safe. If they learn enough about things that they want to run a nameserver, they should know what they're doing. There simply isn't a need for most people -- even those with websites on home DSL machines -- to run BIND.

    That is the most heinous sin of Micros**t's: you just can't do crap like turn on IIS for any random person that owns a computer.

    I don't know if RedHat installs and turns on BIND by default -- if they don't, they shouldn't have to fall on their swords when a BIND vulnerability is found. For OpenBSD, since BIND is part of "the system" i.e. it's not in "the ports", it's audited and any bugs in it will get fixed by the OpenBSD developers if necessary. That is why until 3.3 (released a couple of months ago), BIND4 was the nameserver daemon that came with it. (3.3 comes with BIND 9.2.2.)

    --
    Unlimited growth == Cancer.
  133. Re:Microsoft software has security flaw... what's by aquishix · · Score: 0

    When you go with a Microsoft solution, you basically take what they give you - you're the one that gives them the power to make that decision when you chose to use their software.

    True. Which is one of the *many* reasons why MS == Plague.

    Besides which a lot of video cards now days seem to require Direct X in order to function at all.

    This comment, my friend, makes you a fucking moron. Anyone with even a modium of knowledge about video card hardware would know this to be undeniably false and born of ignorance. DirectX is a software layer that allows Windows programs to access video/sound hardware "directly," and has nothing whatsoever to do with the video cards themselves functioning. If that were true, then you wouldn't even have a bootup screen, CMOS setup, "Windows XP is loading" screen, Linux shell session, X session, or anything else. Please don't post to /. unless you have somewhat of a clue.

    --
    - I am a viral sig. Please copy me and help me spread. [strain #2] Thank you
  134. Re:I prefer NO streaming ANYTHING, dickweed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    www.recycledrussianbrides.com uses pop-under "technology" to have some Russian music I picked up at MP3.com playing in the background.

    Hey thanks! Now I have another site to avoid! Unwanted browser windows &| unwanted music = fucking annoying. Perhaps some people like that kind of shite. Why not make it opt-in as opposed to opt-out? Then people who aren't already using their soundcards for something else 100% of the time they're at their computer won't want to punch you in the face until they've actually met you.

  135. You are the problem by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    In your case its a home pc, but when your machine becomes an open portal for the latest virus, spammers or DOS'ers due to your lack of testing or 'who cares attitude' you effect everyone else.

    Then it becomes my problem.

    My 'attitude' as you call it, is my attempt to prevent people like you from effecting the rest of us that ARE diligent.

    Ever thought of buying a terminal? That might be rather appropriate for your frame of mind.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:You are the problem by iainl · · Score: 1

      I know I should have dropped this long ago, but there you are.

      Let me get this straight: You not only seriously expect Microsoft to introduce more security holes onto my box in a Windows Update patch than they close up, but for me to actually hammer the patch out on an internal network hard enough to figure that out before I connect my machine to the internet?

      The idea that there is a greater chance of Microsoft introducing new, deadly security holes onto boxes out there automatically installing every new patch than there is of holes being left unpatched because the average Windows owner doesn't think they need it when they do is just silly. In fact I'd say that Linux users running a

      You really are odder than I thought.

      --
      "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
  136. Heh by Pinguu · · Score: 1, Funny

    I like the way 30 seconds after I open this artical up and little bubble in the bottom right of my screen appears, with the text 'You have updates to install' ;)

    --
    --
  137. Re:YABOP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But, noooo. The egoistical code jocks think they are 1337 by coding obscure and obfuscated C code, and their clueless PHBs let that CCC (Crappy C Code) go by...

    Don't hate the game, hate the playas, playa.
    Word out.

  138. Re::Actually its been known for a long time ago, b by scot4875 · · Score: 1

    Ok, your gripes with commercial notation software using the industry-wide, open, accepted MIDI standard: isn't this Slashdot? Isn't everyone supposed to be an open-standards advocate?

    Your gripes about developers having to 'use DirectX or your midi interface will not work:' there's MCI (IIRC - Media Control Interface, I believe) -- it works fine.

    Your absolutely clueless rant about DirectX in general: Uh ... whaaaa? Replacement algorithm that directly generates wave at the processor level? What the hell does that mean? You mean, the processor generates a wave, and then sends it to the sound card using DirectSound or the wave mapper? Your friend sounds pretty brilliant.

    DirectX sucks for security and flexability ... because of its fork processes? What do fork processes have to do with *anything*? Did you know that Apache forks a process for every web page it processes? Does that make Apache insecure and inflexible? Besides, DirectX *doesn't* fork processes, it does 'fork' threads, though.

    My biggest gripe: how does incoherent, uninformed babbling like this get modded up to +5 interesting? Do moderators find it interesting that people spout off with no clues about what they're saying? The worst part is, people will read it and think it's *true*, and then use this guy's 'processor level wave' and 'DirectX forking processes' as another excuse to bash MS or whatever.

    Damn ... If you're gonna bitch, at least have a clue about what you're bitching about.

    --Jeremy

    --
    Jesus was a liberal
  139. Re:Windows ... sure, that's easy! by grolschie · · Score: 1

    The on-chip OS in my ZX81. ;-)

  140. NOT every possible Windows configuration... by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 2, Informative

    I'm running Windows 2000 Professional with DirectX 8.1. Seems like I'm immune as, on this OS, only 7.0 and 9.0a are effected.

    The complete list of effected Windows/DirectX combinations are as follows:

    Microsoft DirectX® 5.2 on Windows 98
    Microsoft DirectX 6.1 on Windows 98 SE
    Microsoft DirectX 7.0a on Windows Millennium Edition
    Microsoft DirectX 7.0 on Windows 2000
    Microsoft DirectX 8.1 on Windows XP
    Microsoft DirectX 8.1 on Windows Server 2003
    Microsoft DirectX 9.0a when installed on Windows Millennium Edition
    Microsoft DirectX 9.0a when installed on Windows 2000
    Microsoft DirectX 9.0a when installed on Windows XP
    Microsoft DirectX 9.0a when installed on Windows Server 2003
    Microsoft Windows NT 4.0 with either Windows Media Player 6.4 or Internet Explorer 6 Service Pack 1 installed.
    Microsoft Windows NT 4.0, Terminal Server Edition with either Windows Media Player 6.4 or Internet Explorer 6 Service Pack 1 installed.

    Not every possible Windows configuration but probably a majority of them.

    Check the relevant technical bulletin for more info.

    --

    "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
  141. Re:Microsoft software has security flaw... what's by archen · · Score: 1

    I stand corrected. Obviously a video card would function. I meant generally render with the correct drivers installed (not the default drivers on Windows). My mistake.

    It seems like most ATI cards are made this way, and it's really annoying if you don't have the disk or a network connection to download direct X - you're stuck with 16 colors.

  142. Here is the scoop if you are for real! by ratfynk · · Score: 1
    Ok I am fairly ignorant of closed MS DirectX source code, however his code uses math, to map and change a wave, from this map he somehow has figured out a way to generate samples. His interface works like a fractal generator, you mod the math to change the wave, then send the result to a software model oscillator he has created, the output of which is saved as a wave file. So essentialy he uses the processor crunching to create a wave file. And yes he is brilliant.


    As far as DirectX and general midi the best way for a musician to notate and create music on a computer is to first add the new special (battering) type of ram. If music notation software did not use midi at all then it would be a real product. I have had nothing but trouble caused by midi when using notation software, and I have used most of them! I write music with my ears first and use paper.

    I have also heard of midi files that can contain special sound font instructions that are actually a little MS special .exe from hell. So you can get a case of the worms from a midi file. This is what I meant by a forked up process. Of course a good cfdisk session can fix all that. Midi is fine for a toy and musically illiterate wantabees but as a music medium it sucks!

    --
    OH THE SHAME I fell off the wagon and use sigs again!
  143. don't ya mean an "integrated" security issue. by naph · · Score: 1

    (this post is so fucking late, but it's here anyway, :D)

    --
    "if i'd known it was harmless, i'd have killed it myself"
  144. A bit more serious than the average bug by Cyberllama · · Score: 2, Informative

    Alot of people are acting as though this particular bug is no big deal and isn't worthy of being posted on the main page. But consider this, how many people are running thier browsers with the default configurations? And Both IE and Mozilla will automatically play MIDI files embedded in webpages with this configurations. So this exploit could theoretically allow any website you visit to run arbitrary code on your system. . . I'd say that's pretty serious.

  145. Re:Microsoft software has security flaw... what's by aquishix · · Score: 0

    I stand corrected. Obviously a video card would function. I meant generally render with the correct drivers installed (not the default drivers on Windows). My mistake. It seems like most ATI cards are made this way, and it's really annoying if you don't have the disk or a network connection to download direct X - you're stuck with 16 colors.

    That, I whole-heartedly agree with. I think the entire concept of drivers is completely bogus, and should have been aborted long ago. I think firmware is much sexier and reasonable. Does anyone else besides me get a creepy feeling when they realize that their hardware is the slave of the Internet? Standards should be set in place so strongly that the "drivers" are all resident in the motherboard/hardware, so that the programs themselves don't have to waste a ton of time on what amounts to something that should be in ROM anyway. Let's face it, folks. You upgrade your video card within the same order of magnitude of months as your motherboard, I would bet. Think about it ;).

    --
    - I am a viral sig. Please copy me and help me spread. [strain #2] Thank you
  146. Might as well use a Sticky Note... by mrdlcastle · · Score: 1

    With all the stories coming out in the last few weeks about how MS Windows is so insecure (see this, this, and this), why would anyone in their right mind still use it?

  147. Stuff to do, like cause issues by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    People like you is why we have machines all over the net that are hacked and causing issues.

    Why viruii propagate.

    Perhaps you need a terminal.. And i didnt mean a VT100, you can have your 'windows', just make sure that someone with some brains is running the terminal server.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:Stuff to do, like cause issues by NoCoward · · Score: 1

      I love you technoelite nerds. I used to be like you, thinking that anyone who didn't know how to recompile a kernel was without brains.

      Then I grew up and learned that many people don't WANT to know every little detail about a system, they just want it to perform.

      Once you graduate and get a few years under your belt you will see the light. Until then have fun rebooting and TESTING TESTING TESTING and reading about how FooX causes a buffer overflow in COM Interface Y. That will get you far in life and is truly meaningful.

      Me, I'll just leave that to the people who understand the system and install their suggested updates.

    2. Re:Stuff to do, like cause issues by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      Im older then you, you snot nosed kid.

      Once you get some MORE years under your belt you will realize how much trouble neophytes cause people trying to get work done, how much money ( and time ) they cost business and that they should be managed better.

      Never said they needed to understand how to recompile a kernel. Or how the registers in their CPU work.

      I said they need to not blindly install patches uness they need them, and that they need to test to be responsible. Rather simple concept to grasp.

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  148. RedHat equivalent by imtheguru · · Score: 1

    sort of like the RedHat equivalent of up2date

    or apt-get upgrade depending on your trust and taste.

    --
    Yet Socrates himself is particularly missed.
    A lovely little thinker but a bugger when he's pissed.
  149. FUCK! by krumms · · Score: 1

    And I just spent the last two days downloading the DirectX 9.0a SDK over dial-up!!

    Why, this is almost as bad as me buying VC#.NET and VC++.NET a mere moment before VS.NET 2003 came out.

    Cheaper though.

  150. Dutch = Czech? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hmmm. XP automatically downloaded the fix for me. When I ask for details the description is in Czech or some similar language, while I use a Dutch version of XP! Did anyone else have this problem? And does anyone know how I can get rid of the downloaded Czech patch that is "ready to install" (as a tray icon) for which there is no option to NOT install it?

  151. Yep, easy spread... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Recipie for world domination:

    1) break into one or more machines on the public internet, host virus files on them.

    2) Send spam that says "free Britney Spears music - click here!"

    3) Cute Britney midi file starts playing, and in the meantime...

    4) Users machine becomes new web host for midi file and sends out more spam.

    Just throw a simple remote exploit in there and you're set.

  152. Re:McAffee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    McAffee is MUCH worse, they wont tell you what sites/security setting u need for IE, they simply tell you that you HAVE to set IE to the default level in order to use their web service. This means I have to put up with popups on their site (which already has me hopping mad). I've complained and requested the site/security information but they havent responded. Well fine. I'll post that they submit my password IN PLAINTEXT as a hidden field during authentication and see what people think of that. WTF.

  153. Um, yeah ... by Chromodromic · · Score: 1

    Okay. There are no security bugs in Linux. Suuuuuure.

    Could it be that Windows usage absolutely DWARFS Linux usage worldwide? Nooooo, it's that there are no security bugs. Right.

    Anyway, OpenBSD kicks both their asses. Hard.

    --
    Chr0m0Dr0m!C