HP Shelves Virus Throttler Program
longlanekid writes "Though HP has apparently designed a great program for slowing the spread/proliferation of virii and reducing the impact of DoS attacks, it's all being shelved due to Windows incompatibilities."
This is a product that was intended for use on Windows, they obviously couldn't get it working on Windows. Don't start blaming MS for this one...
:) j/k
That aside, any coincedence that the vice president and chief technology officer of HP is named Tony Redmond?
First off, this is not a troll.
Im my experience it has always been easier to sell reactive solutions to DDoS, worms, and virii.
Working on OpenVision*SecureMAX and Securify(kerberos) back at OpenVision (bought by veritas, products sold to PlatniumGroup, then who knows where), we had a very very hard time selling our prevenative security software (for all the *nix platforms of the time and Windows NT). Everyone wanted virus removal software. Even when Satan was released, people didn't want to have an audit of which machines were vulnerable in the company.
I left the computer security buisness back in '97. At which point did it become easier to sell prevenative measures? Was it just this past year or two with all the outbreaks? Or did veritas make a huge mistake is selling off its aquired security products when it did?
How many people use the word ain't?
/. to make themsleve appear smarter than the average person., but like I said thats just IMHO
How many people use alot?
Just because many poeple use the word doesn't make it proper and all my English teachers have proven this to me when they used to take points away from my papers for using words that were infact not words.
IMHO virii is a word construted by nerds here at
500 dollar reward for tip(s) leading to the arrest of the person(s) who stole my sig.
Network Throttling is nothing new, the honeynet project has been doing this for years.http://project.honeynet.org/tools/index.html
Now they are using Inline Snort (Snort + IPtables) to make a signature base firewall. Essential a layer 7 firewall, but with the cool feature to modify packets and not just block them.
Nothing more, For me to say; About my life, A life of dreams....
Slowing the OS? Sounds like that's already in XP SP2... kidding.
But really, I believe the concept of virus scanners and throttler's such as this are a temporary patch to a problem, not a solution. What if instead of putting on a governor on the IP stack, the OS or a router down the line detects these types of problems. The infected OS is alerted and optionally suspends the attacking process until it is cleared by the user or administrator.
Some ISP's do something simular. One emails the user saying that they may have a virus because of large number of SMTP connections. I think that's a decent start.
Oz
Last I checked winpcap could be installed without a reboot or any user intervention via a silent option to the installer, at least under 2000/XP. I know for a fact you can construct raw packets however you want with winpcap since I use it in my tunneling program.
I don't really see what would stop somebody from embeding winpcap or something similar and spewing out garbage completely bypassing windows tcp/ip stack. Other then size of course, it would be a large worm to include a bunch of dlls just for that.
Morphing Software
This feature is already in XP SP2 here Basically, if a program demonstrates worm like behavious, windows makes the network connectivity slower. One of the many steps in the right direction (I'm a very happy linux user, but don't want to always blame MS for all evil).
Perhaps, HP got it a bit too late, unfortunately, thats how software market is. Unless HP was sure they have a better product, no point in competing with something the OS offers now.
Why not sell a $60 network card that has a built in hardware firewall that could do something like this?
It could run embedded linux on a very low cost, low power embedded processor.
Virus Throttler slows the spread of virus and worm attacks by limiting the network destinations that a virus-infected computer can attempt to connect to each second, according to HP.
HP could have done it by implementing their own network stack, the way VPN and private firewall software vendors do, but it would be much easier if Microsoft was willing to play along.
But then if Microsoft was willing to work with anyone else on fixing Windows, they'd be better of if they started with the many many features of Windows that actively encourage the spread of viruses instead of messing about with half-measures like this. Instead of crippling the OS so it can't do occasionally useful and sometimes vital operations (as Microsoft themselves are doing in XP SP2, don't forget) they should start by splitting IE into a safe HTML-rendering engine and a web-browser that uses it but takes control of its own security...
You're kidding right? You're completely neglecting the low-end server market that is dominated (as far as HP is concerned) by PA-RISC systems running HPUX.
I just have a hard time believing that if it were that easy that HP couldn't figure it out. Companies I've worked for in the past have had to completely re-engineer a Kernel to gain all the functionality required to manipulate all aspects of the IP implementation and the way it interacts with the other layers of the OS to achieve the performance, security, routing, etc. required for the application. This isn't possible without Windows source code, which is not available. I wouldn't think the scenario they describe is out of the realm of reasonability.
Rather different from this case, which seems to result from pure ignorance.
Personally, what really irks me is the use of a Latinate plural for a naturalised English word. English already has a perfectly good mechanism for indicating a plural, one that's used by the huge majority of its words. 'Virus' may have originated (in some form) in Latin, but it's been used in English for over half a millennium! Can't we consider it naturalised enough to take an English plural?
Ceterum censeo subscriptionem esse delendam.