Maybe they should have bought Linux ?

Autor: Jacek Rafal Radzikowski (jradziko_at_piranha.piranet.pl)
Data: Sat 21 Jun 1997 - 13:01:05 MET DST


Sender: Bugtraq List <BUGTRAQ_at_NETSPACE.ORG>
From: Aleph One <aleph1_at_DFW.NET>
Subject: http://www.news.com/News/Item/0,4,11759,00.html

                Hackers jam Microsoft's site

                By Janet Kornblum
                June 20, 1997, 2 p.m. PT

                update Hackers exploited a bug in Microsoft's
                (MSFT) server software, jamming the company's
                Web site since yesterday.

                The hackers are apparently exploiting a bug in
                Windows NT 4.0 running Microsoft's Internet
                Information Server version 3.0, in which the entire
                site is jammed by someone typing in a specific URL
                into a Web browser, according to Mike Nash,
                director of marketing for Windows NT server.

                Hackers sent Microsoft an email at about 4 p.m.
                yesterday, Nash said. Microsoft engineers
                immediately developed a patch and are posting it on
                their own site today. The patch will be ready by 5
                p.m., he added.

                "Hackers made us aware of a problem that they had
                identified," Nash said. "It is possible to develop a
                URL--a string of characters in a browser--that could
                cause interruption of service on a Web server."

                Someone identified as Todd Fast says on his site that
                he inadvertently discovered the bug "while examining
                the parameters of an URL Microsoft's Internet
                Information Server (IIS) would accept without an
                error."

                "This is a hugely embarrassing bug for Microsoft in
                my opinion, particularly since they've just been
                lauded for pulling ahead of Netscape in Web server
                market," Fast wrote. "Knowing that anyone with a
                grudge and a twitchy keyboard could shut down any
                of their customer's Web sites must bear horribly on
                their collective conscience."

                Microsoft representatives originally said that the
                problem was caused by busy servers and that users
                should expect delays through the end of the month.

                The problem was exacerbated by what Microsoft
                spokesman Adam Sohn called "phenomenal growth."

                In other words, not everyone who tries to access the
                site will get onto it every time. The problem is
                compounded by Internet routing jams and individual
                jams at Internet service providers, Nash said.

                Those who were able to get to the home page today
                were greeted with the following message: "We're
                upgrading; our apologies in advance due to
                growth...Over the next few weeks, some users may
                see some interruption in service. Read what's
                happening!"

                The "Read what's happening" had a link, presumably
                to a story, but people had trouble getting to that link.

                The outage and problems have angered some Web
                surfers who have been trying to get onto the pages.
                Some, who presumably did not yet know the cause
                of the outage, used the problems to criticize the
                company's Web server software. "Maybe they
                should have bought Linux," one reader sarcastically
                wrote to CNET's NEWS.COM.

                "They have so many bugs in their software, so why
                use it?," said Ben Efros, a Webmaster who also
                wrote in. "Microsoft is just a large company going
                nowhere on the Internet.

                But others came to the defense of Microsoft, saying
                its software is better than Linux.

-- 
+-------------------------+--------------------------------------------+
| Jacek Rafal Radzikowski | If you make people think they're thinking, |
|  jradziko_at_ia.pw.edu.pl  | they'll love you. But if you really make   |
| jradziko_at_elka.pw.edu.pl | them think - they'll hate you.             |
+-------------------------+--------------------------------------------+


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