Forum Moderators: phranque
".NET: Build and configure more secure Web sites"
This is on the same page where they are reported to be in the middle of a major virus outbreak at Microsoft [news.com.com].
.Net will have just as many problems as the current stuff if not more. I don't know why the MS marketing department thinks MS developers believe anything they are saying.
They have enough money to pay the best coders around top dollar to make that happen.
But they haven't. It just doesn't make sense why they haven't dumped a LARGE amount of money into this issue.
[edited by: grnidone at 11:03 pm (utc) on Jan. 28, 2003]
I just think it's time we stop and realize, that anything microsoft has to say isn't worth the value of a grain of sand any more.
After CodeRed, everyone knew there would be another one of these deals that affected everyone on the net again. That just happened.
MS "owns" the press, controls the agenda, and now many of the webmasters. When is it time to say enough is enough?
Or maybe our time would be better spent bashing the criminals/terrorists who are causing/exploiting these problems?
What about those who didn't patch their systems when the vulnerability was made public?
Let's face it, if everyone had the patches in place the SQLWorm event would have been a non-event and I'd probably be eating supper about now. :)
Pendanticist.
If you've written any code in .NET (especially winforms) you will see how much they've locked it down. You can't do CRAP without getting permissions from the user. Everytime i get a System.Security.SecurityException in .NET, I have to spend an hour or two tracking it down.
Finally, Sql Server is due for an upgrade called Yukon, which is supposed to come out in 2004, to bring it into line with the rest of .NET. They have a lot of products and doing a security overhaul on all of them takes time.
...if everyone had the patches in place the SQLWorm event would have been a non-event...
Microsoft didn't -
[cnn.com ]
"Microsoft Corp. itself was exposed to the virus- like attack that crippled global Internet activity last weekend because it failed to install crucial fixes to its own software on many Microsoft computer servers, according to internal e-mails obtained by The Associated Press."
zooloo
Microsoft didn't -
Yeah :) I heard that on the Network news tonight and about split a gut laughing so hard. Ohhhhhh, the ironies of life. :o
Like ish said in an earlier post to this thread:
True. But we are human not machine
One has to wonder how their new .Net & IIS6 plans will actually pan out given some employees got bit by SQLWorm too, eh?
:)
Will wonders ever cease?
Pendanticist.