SQL Injection Turns BusinessWeek Into Viral Replicator
martins writes "The website of popular magazine BusinessWeek has been attacked via SQL injection in an attempt to infect its readership with malware. Hundreds of pages in a section of BusinessWeek's website which offers information about where MBA students might find future employers have been affected."
You haven't seen the modern MBA have you. Almost half of the MBA students have Computer Science Degrees and have been working professional for at least 5 years. Many of them while good at what they do, wants to further their career so go for an MBA so they be considered qualified for promotion. Not every one wants to be a basic programmer for the rest of their life, they much rather have influence in the process and the design and less time doing the drudge work.
If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
TFA: "the code injected into BusinessWeek's website points to a Russian website that is currently down and not delivering further malicious code."
Seriously? Why is it that these people always point to their site? wouldn't you figure that, with a bit of injection, they could put the damn thing in the database? It's never made any sense to me. Anyone have any insights?
Also, they always waste these opportunities to give replace real headlines with those from the Onion... if they're going to do something malicious, they should at least do it with style...
Many of them while good at what they do
Not every one wants to be a basic programmer for the rest of their life
Pretty much all of the *GOOD* programmers *DO* want to program for the rest of their lives (while I wouldn't say "basic programmer"....most want to be Dev Lead / Architect type of coders, but coders none the less). And being Dev Lead / Architect is not the type of position that goes to the MBA grads.....MBAs are for people who want to go into Management / Project Management.
I've been in the industry since 1994 and am one of the top database developers in my company. And I don't see myself as being a manager any time soon. I enjoy programming too much. [This is in a large corporation where a manager is not a technical manager; small companies where "Dev Lead" equates to manager might be a different situation.]
Layne
They just don't teach anything about security in schools. We interviewed an intern candidate this spring and asked her how one would avoid a SQL injection attack.
Her response: "Don't use Microsoft products."
Swing and a miss!
The candidate's sample code had a big 'ol SQL injection vulnerability. Yet the instructor raved over his project.
I'd be really curious to know what he thought of it afterwards, and whether having an MBA really helped him understand this other world. I get the distinct impression that an MBA is the business-world equivalent of an MSCE: it gives you some basic knowledge and impresses the clueless but isn't really very useful.
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