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Information Security News
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Security Mailing Lists Come Under Fire
From: InfoSec News <isn () c4i org>
Date: Wed, 26 Mar 2003 02:01:48 -0600 (CST)
http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,3959,974781,00.asp
By Dennis Fisher
March 25, 2003
A Danish security company, angry over what it perceives as censorship
on several popular mailing lists, is launching "a revolution to remove
SecurityFocus and CERT from power."
At present, the revolution consists of a new mailing list that will
aggregate vulnerability advisories and other security-related reports
from a variety of sources. Employees of Secunia Ltd. will take
advisories from these sources, research and verify them and then
submit them to the new list.
The list, known as the Secunia Security Advisories List, is designed
to compete with lists such as SecurityFocus' BugTraq and to complement
more open lists, including VulnWatch and Full-Disclosure, Secunia
executives say. Company executives are upset with the direction that
BugTraq has taken since Symantec Corp. acquired SecurityFocus last
year.
"The problem with SecurityFocus is not that they moderate the lists,
but the fact that they deliberately delay and partially censor the
information," said Thomas Kristensen, chief technology officer of
Secunia, based in Copenhagen, Denmark. "Since they were acquired by
Symantec, they changed their policy regarding BugTraq. Before they
used to post everything to everybody at the same time. Now they
protect the interests of Symantec, delay information and inform their
customers in advance. This is a problem as only companies who pay over
$30,000 can get access to this information."
Unlike some other security lists, BugTraq is actively moderated and
therefore not every submission makes it onto the list.
Full-Disclosure, for instance, is only lightly moderated, meaning that
virtually all posts are approved and immediately sent to subscribers.
SecurityFocus officials did not respond to a request for comment on
this story.
Secunia officials also take the CERT Coordination Center to task for
its policy of providing some organizations with advance notice of
vulnerability reports as part of a fee-based program in cooperation
with the Internet Security Alliance.
"At Secunia we feel that SecurityFocus has betrayed the community it
used to serve so loyally, that's why we started Secunia," said
Kristensen. "I believe that security information should be free, so
that administrators can patch their systems and software developers
can learn from the mistakes made by others."
Secunia is a provider of security services and tools.
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