Re: [Full-disclosure] FD subject line/name of org suggestion...

2008-12-12 Thread Luke Scharf
Knud Erik Højgaard wrote: On Thu, Dec 11, 2008 at 9:28 PM, - o z - . o...@hotmail.com wrote: I don't want to read it with Lynx, either. I've got some damn good SMTP clients, like Pine v.01a, OK? How do you read anything with an SMTP client? tcpdump? -Luke smime.p7s

Re: [Full-disclosure] U.S. Is Losing Global Cyberwar, Commission Says

2008-12-10 Thread Luke Scharf
Michael Krymson wrote: Like tiny Link holding the almighty Triforce braced overhead glinting in the sunlight, so too shall we raise up PCI to the heavens as our shining, guiding light of all things good; it will save us from all evils, so shall it be... You should revisit this opinion after

Re: [Full-disclosure] U.S. Is Losing Global Cyberwar, Commission Says

2008-12-09 Thread Luke Scharf
Rafal @ IsHackingYou.com wrote: Hold the phone...$5k-$7k to fix an infected device!? Really? HOLY CRAP... either that's a completely made-up FUD figure, or the government contractors are making *way* too much money off my taxes. If you count lost productivity for both the IT staff

Re: [Full-disclosure] U.S. Is Losing Global Cyberwar, Commission Says

2008-12-09 Thread Luke Scharf
Luke Scharf wrote: Rafal @ IsHackingYou.com wrote: Hold the phone...$5k-$7k to fix an infected device!? Really? HOLY CRAP... either that's a completely made-up FUD figure, or the government contractors are making *way* too much money off my taxes. If you count lost productivity

Re: [Full-disclosure] U.S. Is Losing Global Cyberwar, Commission Says

2008-12-09 Thread Luke Scharf
Elazar Broad wrote: Neither, because ultimately no one cares, and that is why the financial industry foots the 60 billion identity theft bill. My rant was a little bit of wishful thinking and a shred of belief in the human race... Having been a student in a computer-security training

Re: [Full-disclosure] Project Chroma: A color code for the state ofcyber security

2008-12-03 Thread Luke Scharf
Mike C wrote: If you really want to change state of security for the n00bs, spread the knowledge, not the colors. Thats what project Chroma is all about.. Are you on board?! This already exists, backed up by some hard-core security competence: http://isc.sans.org/infocon.html