Erm .net fix? #
Posted Friday 13th July 2007 12:20 GMT
The link for statistics is leading to the .net fix mentioned in another article.
Posted Friday 13th July 2007 12:20 GMT
The link for statistics is leading to the .net fix mentioned in another article.
Posted Friday 13th July 2007 13:12 GMT
Oracle's networks have long been a significant source of spam, apparently injected from compromised machines. I've reported it on numerous occasions to their postmaster and their abuse desk but never even had a reply. I am not in the least bit surprised to find out these pwn3d internal Oracle machines are now part of a botnet. Be a blood good thing if they do clean them up at long last.
Posted Friday 13th July 2007 14:57 GMT
the servers involved are running Oracle databases and hence have to be held down at some ancient patch level which Oracle has blessed as being able to run their database program?
(Don't laugh, there are many "enterprise" software packages which will only run on certain, ancient patch levels of OSs and which break if anything's upgraded.)
Posted Saturday 14th July 2007 10:40 GMT
I dont doubt that to date, there is no evidence for any attack originating from that machine. However, given the machine is listed as emea-netcache1 its highly likely its just a proxy and forwarder. Clever wording to calm the customers.
Posted Saturday 14th July 2007 21:39 GMT
It's gotta be MS' fault for their 'nix based systems...
Posted Monday 16th July 2007 07:35 GMT
For some years we've had drivel and utter lies from Oracle about the resilience of their products. Remember the "Can't Break it" campaign? What absolute toss. Perhaps we'll see some real effort from this bunch of clowns to get their act together. I doubt it though.
Never mind. Perhaps one day the world will wake up and fall in love with DB2........
Posted Thursday 19th July 2007 04:18 GMT
>For some years we've had drivel and utter lies from Oracle about the
>resilience of their products.
Didn't stop you or anyone else buying them though....