Recently, the shocking news that CD Projekt Red was hacked swept the internet. According to the hackers, they managed to get ahold of a ton of sensitive company information, including the source code ...
For one moment last week, the Internet stood still. At midnight Thursday, July 19 GMT, more than 350,000 servers infected with the so-called Code Red worm stopped hammering the Internet with scans ...
When computer security historians look back at 2001, the emergence of the Nimda and Code Red worms will likely sit close to the top of their significant events lists. Both worms were heralded as ...
It all began with an unassuming blog post, "Furthering the evolution of CentOS Stream," by Mike McGrath, Red Hat's vice president of Core Platforms. For the non-Hatters among you, Core Platforms is ...
When two Orange County, Calif., computer programmers last month named a computer virus they had discovered "Code Red," after the cherry soda they had been chugging, they gave PepsiCo's new soft drink ...
When CentOS announced in 2020 that it was shutting down its traditional "rebuild" of Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) to focus on its development build, Stream, CentOS suggested the strategy "removes ...
A malicious worm named Code Red that exploits a buffer overflow vulnerability in certain configurations of Microsoft Corp.’s Windows NT and Windows 2000 operating systems has spread rapidly over the ...
Someone spent a lot of money to acquire CD Projekt Red's stolen game and engine code. Just one day after hackers leaked the first CD Projekt Red game source code for Gwent, an auction was held where ...
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