Legal goons threaten researcher for reporting security bug

When vuln disclosures are outlawed...

By Dan Goodin in San Francisco • Get more from this author

Posted in Security, 29th April 2011 23:12 GMT

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/04/29/security_researcher_threatened/

A German software company has threatened legal action against a security 
researcher who privately reported a critical vulnerability in one of its 
programs, Dark Reading reports.

Legal goons from Magix AG sent a nasty gram to a researcher who goes by 
“Acidgen” after he reported the stack buffer overflow in the company's Music 
Maker 16. According to the report, Acidgen alerted Magix representatives to the 
bug in several emails that also included proof-of-concept code that forced the 
Windows calculator to open, indicating the flaw could be exploited to execute 
malicious code on a victim's computer.

Acidgen also provided suggestions for fixing the flaw, Dark Reading said. He 
also told the representatives he planned to disclose vulnerability details 
publicly once a patch was released.

That's when things got ugly.

“MAGIX does not appreciate that you are intending to publicly release the 
Exploit and to cause irreparable harm,” a company attorney wrote. “As you maybe 
[sic] aware it is illegal to release software which is intended to commit 
computer sabotage (e.g. Sec. 202C I No. 2 German Criminal Law). In addition 
this announcement together with your offering to have the vulnerability fixed 
by your company may be considered as an attempted extortion.”

The letter said Magix would “enter into all necessary and appropriate legal 
steps” and to “inform manufacturers of antivirus software that there might be a 
new virus based on your code.”

Germany enacted a draconian hacker law in 2007 that also criminalizes the 
creation or possession of dual-use security tools. ®
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