BS7799 and ISO17799
From: Carmelo Floridia (cfloridia@lex.unict.it)Date: 07/27/01
- Previous message: dreamer@darkness.gr: "Re: Remote Administration on W2K"
- In reply to: Pete Sherwood: "Re: A code red that could bring down the net?"
- Next in thread: Meritt James: "Re: BS7799 and ISO17799"
- Next in thread: Pete Sherwood: "Re: A code red that could bring down the net?"
- Reply: Meritt James: "Re: BS7799 and ISO17799"
- Reply: Roy Madden: "Re: BS7799 and ISO17799"
- Reply: Julian Curmi: "Re: BS7799 and ISO17799"
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ] [ attachment ]
From: "Carmelo Floridia" <cfloridia@lex.unict.it> To: <SECURITY-BASICS@securityfocus.com> Subject: BS7799 and ISO17799 Date: Fri, 27 Jul 2001 10:20:23 +0200 Message-ID: <ICEOKGFOKJMFDKLJODAHGECFCCAA.cfloridia@lex.unict.it>
What's the difference between BS7799 and ISO17799?
best regards Carmelo
-----Messaggio originale-----
Da: Pete Sherwood [mailto:petersherwood@home.com]
Inviato: mercoledì 25 luglio 2001 23.36
A: Dom De Vitto; Patrick Smallwood
Cc: SECURITY-BASICS@securityfocus.com; vuln-dev@securityfocus.com
Oggetto: Re: A code red that could bring down the net?
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1
[snip]
> I give up...who is William T Morris? My G-Dads name is Morris Williams,
> but he doesnt like the Internet, much less interested in a "Big DoS" of
> it...
[snip]
> I think a guy called William 'T' Morris may have had this idea first.
> Allegedly :-)
Robert T. Morris!
> History. History. History.
OK. Here is one explanation:
In 1988, the ARPANET had its first automated network security incident,
usually referred to as "the Morris worm" (4). A student at Cornell
University (Ithaca, NY), Robert T. Morris, wrote a program that would
connect to another computer, find and use one of several vulnerabilities to
copy itself to that second computer, and begin to run the copy of itself at
the new location. Both the original code and the copy would then repeat
these actions in an infinite loop to other computers on the ARPANET. This
"self-replicating automated network attack tool" caused a geometric
explosion of copies to be started at computers all around the ARPANET. The
worm used so many system resources that the attacked computers could no
longer function. As a result, 10% of the U.S. computers connected to the
ARPANET effectively stopped at about the same time.
See:
http://www.cert.org/encyc_article/tocencyc.html
> Dom
Pete Sherwood
613-260-0612 (home/office)
613-591-8900 ext. 525 (voice-mail)
PGP and Thawte digital keys available @
http://members.home.net/petersherwood/
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: PGPfreeware 7.0.3 for non-commercial use <http://www.pgp.com>
iQA/AwUBO187kromytMtxLfsEQLWxwCfRXrglPH1Tu7EPe8+tL/KAbaRAooAoIaM
4EbW55WMlKfsLEDpliqkHkTq
=EScm
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
- Previous message: dreamer@darkness.gr: "Re: Remote Administration on W2K"
- In reply to: Pete Sherwood: "Re: A code red that could bring down the net?"
- Next in thread: Meritt James: "Re: BS7799 and ISO17799"
- Next in thread: Pete Sherwood: "Re: A code red that could bring down the net?"
- Reply: Meritt James: "Re: BS7799 and ISO17799"
- Reply: Roy Madden: "Re: BS7799 and ISO17799"
- Reply: Julian Curmi: "Re: BS7799 and ISO17799"
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ] [ attachment ]
Relevant Pages
|