Why a near-miss cyberattack put US officials and the tech industry on edge
By Raphael Satter
April 5, 20245:51 PM EDTUpdated 2 days ag0
https://www.reuters.com/technology/c...ge-2024-04-05/
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Why a near-miss cyberattack put US officials and the tech industry on edge
By Raphael Satter
April 5, 20245:51 PM EDTUpdated 2 days ag0
https://www.reuters.com/technology/c...ge-2024-04-05/
That's a pretty interesting story.
Yeah, that's insane that it almost worked but its not too surprising. Given enough time I suppose anything is possible.
I never realized that opensource software was a large part of the internet. That seems like a dangerous concept, considering how much our computers/phones are interfaced with the internet.
Look at Bootstrap, last reading I saw roughly 25% of the internet uses it and it's open-source.
That's just one example, but there are plenty of examples out there.
Oh, it's all supported by open source:
https://xkcd.com/2347/
If it's in an xkcd comic, it's real.
And when you get right down to it, the example in that article is not all that far off the Snake Game thread that has become such a legend here.
Actually, with open-source software, you have lots of potential eyes looking at the code. That is how issues like this are found. With closed source, you have to hope the company that is trying to maximize their profit spends a few bucks on people to review their software for issues. Insiders and outside hackers have done similar things to closed-source software (SolarWinds).Quote:
I never realized that opensource software was a large part of the internet. That seems like a dangerous concept, considering how much our computers/phones are interfaced with the internet.