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Date:      Tue, 27 Jun 1995 03:12:25 +0100
From:      "Jordan K. Hubbard" <jkh@freebsd.org>
To:        hackers@freebsd.org
Subject:   Pete Cottrell: FreeBSD - Good News and Bad News
Message-ID:  <5441.804219145@whisker.internet-eireann.ie>

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Sigh!!  FYI..

------- Forwarded Message

From: pete@cs.UMD.EDU (Pete Cottrell)
Message-Id: <199506270110.VAA13354@zippy.cs.UMD.EDU>
Subject: FreeBSD - Good News and Bad News

	Jordan - the good news is that FreeBSD has gotten print in a
major newspaper. The bad news is .... well, they got the story a bit
wrong. 
	I have pointed out the error of their ways in a posting to a
DC-area newsgroup in hopes of getting the correct story out. FYI, the
"DigitalFlubs" column each week spotlights some techno-glitch or
computer item gone awry.

%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%

	From the June 26th, 1995 "DigitalFlubs" column of the WashTech part 
of the business section, published in every Monday's Washington Post:

	A piece of security software widely used on computer networks has a 
hole in it.
	The federally funded Computer Emergency Response Team said it has
distributed instructions on how to correct the problem in FreeBSD, a program
created by a software engineer in the Netherlands.
	In some circumstances, the hole lets people tapping into a computer
see and alter information that should be off-limits to them.
	FreeBSD is an "enhancement" to S/Key, a program that controls password
access to networked computers.
	S/Key itself does not have the problem.



------- End of Forwarded Message




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