Jim Preston wrote:

According to this reasoning, I know of website that consistently causes browsers to shut down. This website is a legitimate business site, Should this site be prosecuted under this law?

In response to your example, that was a DOS attack and is illegal. Microsoft updates have causes systems including servers to fail and crash, should you be petitioning to have Microsoft prosecuted under this law?

Yes if done maliciously.

There is a gulf of difference between sending out an update which is unintentionally faulty, and sending one out which is deliberately created to cause problems. For the MS updates that install the remote shutdown capability, MS did ask before installing it (at least on my machine) - though I have to say they misdescribed it so as not to reveal it's true purpose. And yes, I did complain to our authorities, but "they had bigger fish to fry" would fairly neatly sum up their interest. If a website is regularly crashing browsers, then again, is it an unintended consequence of something innocent they are doing, or is it a malicious act ? If the former then no offence, if the latter then it's illegal over here.

In the words of the ClamAV project "Starting from 15 April 2010 our CVD will contain a special signature which disables all clamd installations older than 0.95"

So you have zero defence - this was a deliberate act, it was done with malice aforethought, it was done with the full knowledge that admins would not have expected this as an AV update, and it was done with full cogniscence of the likely outcome. I'm fairly certain that would count under UK law as a criminal act.


Like I said, I'm not going to get in a froth about it, and I decided yesterday not to raise it. But since someone else has, and you've poo-poo'd that as well ...

--
Simon Hobson

Visit http://www.magpiesnestpublishing.co.uk/ for books by acclaimed
author Gladys Hobson. Novels - poetry - short stories - ideal as
Christmas stocking fillers. Some available as e-books.
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