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Re: [Full-Disclosure] Corporate Information Security Accountability Act of 2003
- To: Chris Sharp <illectro2001@yahoo.com>, full-disclosure@lists.netsys.com
- Subject: Re: [Full-Disclosure] Corporate Information Security Accountability Act of 2003
- From: "Jonathan A. Zdziarski" <jonathan@nuclearelephant.com>
- Date: Tue, 04 Nov 2003 15:32:27 -0500
[Reference: http://www.nuclearelephant.com/papers/symantec.html]
If Symantec has it their way, they will want to make it illegal to
distribute any information on vulnerabilities, diagnostic tools, and
exploit code...leaving companies like them in a position where they will
be necessary to the correct operation of a publicly traded company, and
nobody to audit the auditors (for QA, back doors, etc.)
Take it one step further and these companies could easily operate under
a shroud of information secrecy enabling them to generate their own new
exploits "in the wild" as a means of increasing revenue keeping
corporations in fear of violating securities law by not having a weekly
audit for $100,000.
I guess I must be paranoid.
On Tue, 2003-11-04 at 15:25, Chris Sharp wrote:
> I'd bet my ass that ISS/Foundstone/Qualys is behind
> this somewhere. Most security companies bottom line
> would benefit from this, but the people building the
> automated scanning tools can suddenly market
> themselves as objective security auditing tools. These
> expensive pieces of software suddenly become standards
> against which your security is measured.
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