Cisco IOS Source Code Theft Story Continues
securitas writes "eWEEK's Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols reports that the source code for Cisco's 'main networking device operating system was stolen on Thursday' (May 13) according to the Russian company SecurityLab. SecurityLab says that criminals broke into Cisco's network and stole 800MB of source code for IOS 12.3 and IOS 12.3t, a pre-release variant. The purported culprit(s) then bragged about the feat in an IRC session and offered 2.5 MB of the code as proof. Industry analysts Dell'Oro Group says that 'Cisco owns 62 percent of the core router market.' More at the Sydney Morning Herald and Windows Network magazine." Our original coverage was here of this story.
Moderator has no sense of humor.
this is the best one.
Is this an original work or is it one of those standardized karma whore posts where you just insert some on topic words?
It's +1 Funny if it's the former but not knowing the answer, I won't risk my hard earned mod points
Nah, it was thongthongthongthong
He tried to kill me with a forklift!
that is all kinds of wrong
So what's the big deal?
;-) )
Usually from Sourceforge, or just by doing a simple 'emerge -u world'.
Hey! I *knew* Open Source has it's good points. You don't have to be scared that someone steals your source code...
(ok, now this *could* be the same as leaving your keys in your BMW, because noone is able to steal it! They just legally drive away
"That's the stupidest combination I've ever heard in my life. That's the kinda thing an idiot would have on his luggage."
-Patrick
"They never stop thinking about new ways to harm our country and our people, and neither do we."
It's worse than that. My wife had locks on her luggage when she checked it and boarded the plane. When we picked it up, the locks were lying on top of the clothes inside the luggage, neatly cut.
1 and 4 are redundant.
human nature is such a bitch
Wow, you mean students actually made some money off of their inventions rather than the school? How novel. One of the schools here consistently hands out class projects with the sole purpose of using the students' designs and code for commercial gain (and professor notoriety). Personally, I think those students pay enough money in tuition every year to keep their inventions. I rate this right up there with the highly ethical tradition of college sports.
Yes, I am an agent of Satan, but my duties are largely ceremonial.
The thing that annoys me most is how Cisco is going to handle this.
I bought one of their home/soho routers, the "cheap" $300 one. I wanted more meat to my home broadband than what Linksys had to offer.
The day after I buy it I find out that the software is out of date and there are upgrades. Am I able to get them? Nope. I have to pay an extra $100/year to just get the software updates.
Needless to say, this will be the last Cisco product I own.
Considering the small form factor PCs out there, custom Linux firewall is in the works.
bring back that ol' tech to meeeee!
I will gladly construct anyone a fine redundant pathing, storing and forwarding, spooling no fooling work rain and shine over pots UUCP network for a nominal fee.
> 4. Showers monthly
I can't work out if that's meant to be an insult or a compliment.
Norman Cook's Ode to Sl