----- Original Message -----
From: "Jes�s Corrius" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Adminpub" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, August 23, 2003 8:53 PM
Subject: [admpub] Microsoft Is Using Linux To Protect Its Own Web Site




Microsoft Is Using Linux To Protect Its Own Web Site
Thu Aug 21, 3:35 AM ET


According to a post on the Netcraft Web site, Microsoft changed its DNS
settings on Friday so that requests for www.microsoft.com no longer
resolve to machines on Microsoft's own network, but instead are handled
by the Akamai caching system, which runs Linux.

Akamai runs a service to help boost Web site performance by caching
copies of Web sites on many servers in many locations. Akamai can help
defend against denial-of-service attacks by spreading the attack among
many servers. Just as a distributed denial-of-service attack enlists
large numbers of systems to attack a single server, Akamai presents a
distributed defense against denial-of-service attacks.

As of this writing, Netcraft reports that www.microsoft.com is still
running on Linux, although microsoft.com is reported as running on
Windows Server 2003.

A Microsoft spokeswoman said the company "respects the fact that [its
partners and vendors] may have diversified business models and operate
in mixed IT environments. Microsoft's main concern is doing whatever it
takes to help ensure customers can get to the Blaster worm patch to
protect their computers.... Microsoft is using Akamai's extensive
worldwide network to distrubte the massive traffic that is illegally
being directed at Microsoft by hackers."

The Blaster worm, which struck the Internet last week, was set with a
payload designed to trigger this past Saturday and flood the address
windowsupdate.com with a massive denial-of-service attack. But
windowsupdate.com never was a Microsoft site, it was an incorrect
address for picking up Windows updates. Until Saturday, Microsoft had
set windowsupdate.com to redirect to windowsupdate.microsoft.com;
Microsoft protected itself last week by switching off that redirection.

An Akamai spokeswoman declined to comment, except to confirm that
Microsoft is a customer.

Microsoft using a Linux service is ironic, given that Microsoft has
identified Linux as its biggest competitor. In a conference call with
analysts last month, company CFO John Connors ranked Linux as the #2
risk faced by the company. The #1 risk was the general economic
environment, Connors said. Nearly one in five small and mid-sized
businesses are using Linux on the desktop.

In tomorrow's news: McDonald's executive found eating at Burger King.

Enlla�:

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=74&e=8&u=/cmp/13100775

--
Jes�s Corrius
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>



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