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Experts: Upgrade BIND on your Linux server

Author: JT Smith

Interactive Week follows up on reports that some Linux servers are vulnerable to the “Lion” worm because it exploits BIND. Not exactly new news, but the story gives a backgrounder on what happens when the Lion worm attacks.

Category:

  • Linux

Eazel moves ahead after layoffs

Author: JT Smith

Slashdot readers talk about an article from LinuxPower.org about Eazel after the recent release of Nautilus 1.0 and the layoffs shortly thereafter. One of the Eazel people says, “It’s been a tough time around Eazel. However, we managed to keep most of the core
engineering team intact, and there is a lot of energy now. I like the way Bud Tribble, our VP of
Engineering, put it: ‘We have a lot of momentum. We’ve lost some mass. So that means we have
to increase velocity.’ And it’s been happening — we’ve been achieving things in a matter of weeks
that would have taken months before.”

Category:

  • Open Source

Lossy File Compression – (April Fool’s Joke)

Author: JT Smith

Anonymous Reader writes, “Hi. I maintain a ‘project’ at SourceForge named LZIP, which can compress your files down to 0% of their original size. How does it work? The ‘L’ stands for ‘lossy.’ I put the page together last year for April Fool’s, but was unable to get any news site to pick it up. I figure *somebody* must think it’s funny, and since NewsForge is parented by the same people that gave approval to my wasting of VA Linux’s server space for this gag, maybe you would deem it worth a mention on April Fool’s Day.”

Category:

  • Management

Setting up a Linux Web server

Author: JT Smith

A LinuxWorld.com columnist shares what he learned while
setting up a new Website for VarLinux.org, a nonprofit portal.

Category:

  • Linux

U.S. company defeats Brit anonymous surfing law

Author: JT Smith

The Register reports that anonymous Web-surfing company SafeWeb has expanded its secure server facilities
in New York “so that Europeans can enjoy faster access to private, and virtually
anonymous, Web browsing and e-mail.
The company also has an application called Triangle Boy, which adds an extra layer
of security for the truly paranoid and further obstacles and frustrations for investigators
and censors.

Triangle Boy is a randomly-distributed network of boxes, made available by volunteers
with fat pipes, which forwards users to the SafeWeb portal.

It’s a free, open source, peer-to-peer application that the company says will bypass
firewalls and other mechanisms that attempt to block access to SafeWeb.”

Category:

  • Programming

Red Hat to require personality test

Author: JT Smith

Ok, this is an April Fool’s joke, courtesy of ZDNet’s “AngerDesk.” Supposedly, the test filters out customers whose business is likely to fail and others who are likely to overuse Red Hat’s support services.

Category:

  • Management

Curiosity kills network at security confab

Author: JT Smith

CNet covers the CanSecWest secruity conference in Vancouver, B.C., this week. Attendees could chose black hats or white hats, and the black hats were gone by the second day. “When you get down to it, these
guys are really all the same
personality type,” CNet quoted Martin
Roesch, president of
SourceFire and the creator of a
popular open-source intrusion
detection system called Snort.

Category:

  • Linux

Customizing console fonts

Author: JT Smith

FreeBSD Diary has a tutorial about creating your own fonts for using on a console. “After playing with slackware for a while I got pretty excited about some interesting fonts that they have to replace the very boring and
generic console font.”

Category:

  • Unix

PostgreSQL 7.1 RC 1 released

Author: JT Smith

From LinuxPR: The files for Release Candidate 1 of PostgreSQL 7.1 are now available for
download at PostgreSQL.org.

Link is here: ftp://ftp.postgresql.org/pub/dev/.

The release candidate phase follows beta testing and is the last phase before a
version’s official release.

Linux has bright future in India

Author: JT Smith

Times of India interviews Atul Chitnis, the director
of Exocore Consulting Pvt Ltd, and the spokesperson for
the Linux India user group, about Linux’s future in India. He says that “contrary to the myth that Linux doesn’t have enough
applications, there is virtually no application available
under the Windows programme today that does not have an
equivalent one available under Linux.”

Category:

  • Linux