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26th Jan 2012, 07:13 PM #1OPMemberWebsite's:
ihide.infoSymantec admits to pcAnywhere threat from code leak
Symantec admits to pcAnywhere threat from code leak
By John Callaham
The online theft of source code that happened several years ago from the PC security software company Symantec has now caused the company to admit that users of one of its products, the remote PC software pcAnywhere, are now at "increased risk" of having information stolen from them as a result of the code theft. The company made the statement late on Tuesday on its web site.
The issue started when a hacker group claimed to have leaked source code from Symantec earlier this month. The company said that the source code was created several years ago. At first the company said it was stolen from a third party server but later admitted that the source code was taken from Symantec's own servers back in 2006. It's still unknown why it took so long for the stolen source code to resurface.
Earlier, Symantec said that owners of its current software products were not at risk with this source code leak, with the exception that users of the pcAnywhere product were only slightly at risk. Now Symantec claims:
Our current analysis shows that all pcAnywhere 12.0, 12.1 and 12.5 customers are at increased risk, as well as customers using prior versions of the product. pcAnywhere is also bundled with numerous Symantec products.
At this time, Symantec recommends disabling the product until Symantec releases a final set of software updates that resolve currently known vulnerability risks.ShareShiz Reviewed by ShareShiz on . Symantec admits to pcAnywhere threat from code leak Symantec admits to pcAnywhere threat from code leak By John Callaham Rating: 5KWWH has turned gay. I will not return until Phamous is demoted.
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27th Jan 2012, 12:33 AM #2mmm mmm!
Way ahead of you, Symantec!
Most /.er's stopped using your products a long time ago.
Next up, Intel CEO admits "McAfee is just bloatware that doesn't actually do anything. To be honest, most of it just runs loops that eat up CPU, so people think it's doing something and want to buy a faster Intel CPU. It hasn't stopped an actual virus since the mid-90's."HATERS GONNA probably bring up some valid points considering I am an ignorant little twat so far up my own ass that i blame my problems on everyone and if you criticize me you're automatically wrong.
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27th Jan 2012, 12:41 AM #3MemberWebsite's:
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