China’s Green Dam, No Longer Compulsory, May Have Lifted Code - 3025th Edition

This post was written by admin on June 16, 2009
Posted Under: Tech News
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LionMage writes “Much has been made previously of how China’s Green Dam software must be installed on all new PCs in China, and of more recent revelations that the software may create exploitable security vulnerabilities or even provide the Chinese government with a ready-made botnet to use for potentially nefarious purposes. (One of those prior articles even discusses how Green Dam incorporates blacklists from CyberSitter.) Now the BBC is reporting that Solid Oak’s CyberSitter software may have had more than just a compiled blacklist lifted from it. Solid Oak is claiming that actual pieces of their code somehow ended up in Green Dam. From PC Magazine’s article: ‘Solid Oak Software, the developer of CyberSitter, claims that the look and feel of the GUI used by Green Dam mimics the style of CyberSitter. But more damning, chief executive Brian Milburn said, was the fact that the Green Dam code uses DLLs identified with the CyberSitter name, and even makes calls back to Solid Oak’s servers for updates.’” Relatedly, reader Spurious Logic writes that Green Dam won’t be mandatory after all, according to an unnamed official with China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology.

 Chinas Green Dam, No Longer Compulsory, May Have Lifted Code   3025th Edition

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

 Chinas Green Dam, No Longer Compulsory, May Have Lifted Code   3025th Edition
 Chinas Green Dam, No Longer Compulsory, May Have Lifted Code   3025th Edition

 Chinas Green Dam, No Longer Compulsory, May Have Lifted Code   3025th Edition
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