Sebastian Dietz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Apparently they did the only possible solution. They took the domain > www.sco.com > out of the dns. At least i cannot find it anymore in various dns's...
"only possible action"?? Somehow I think it odd that a company as clearly litigious as SCO is of late would jeopardize its ability to claim damages should a court case ever ensue charging someone over the creation and/or release of the Mydoom viruses. Were that to happen, surely SCO would be in a much stronger position if it was able to stand up in court with heaps of fancy "before and after" traffic load, lag, reachability, etc, etc charts that would clearly illustrate to any two brain-celled jury member that SCO was "attacked" and almost equally clearly show that its web presence (presumably a highly valuable asset to any "real" computer technology company these days?) "must have been damaged"... To simply commit a self-inflicted DoS seems like legal lunancy to me. Of course, IANAL, so there may be some even more cunning legal plot afoot here... Regards, Nick FitzGerald _______________________________________________ Full-Disclosure - We believe in it. Charter: http://lists.netsys.com/full-disclosure-charter.html
