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Cisco investigates source code leak
By Robert Lemos
Staff Writer, CNET
News.com
An unspecified amount of the proprietary source code that
drives Cisco Systems' networking hardware has appeared on the
Internet, the technology giant acknowledged early Monday. While
the company was investigating whether a breach had lead to the
leak, a representative could not confirm whether that network
intruders had made off with the software equivalent of the crown
jewels: some 800 megabytes of the networking giant's source code.
"Cisco is aware that a potential compromise of its
proprietary information occurred and was reported on a public Web
site just prior to the weekend," said Jim Brady, spokesman
for the company. "The Cisco information security team is
looking into this matter and investigating what happened."
Brady could give no further details on the matter.
The leak is the second time this year that a major technology
company's product source code has been made public without
authorization. In February, Microsoft's source code for parts of
Windows 2000 and Windows NT were leaked to the Internet. One
security researcher claimed that he had discovered a minor
Internet Explorer flaw by analyzing that source code.
It's uncertain to what degree the leaked code will affect Cisco
security. The security of Microsoft's operating systems has not
significantly suffered from the hundreds of megabytes of source
code leaked to the public. Moreover, attackers tend not to focus
on vulnerabilities in networking hardware. A major flaw that Cisco
warned customers about in July never materialized as a threat.
News of the latest source code leak appeared on a Russian security
site Securitylabs.ru on Saturday, two days after its
administrators received the leaked source code. The site posted
two files of source code written in the C programming language,
which apparently enables some next-generation Internet protocol
version 6 (IPv6) functionality. One file was copyrighted in 1996
and the other in 2003.
According to the security site, online vandals were able to
compromise Cisco's corporate network and steal about 800MB of
source code. A person with the alias "Franz" bragged
about the intrusion and posted about 2.5 megabytes of code on the
Internet relay chat (IRC) system not long after the alleged
break-in. By Sunday evening, the code could not be located by CNET
News.com, however, and members of the IRC channel were speculating
about the authenticity of the two brief excerpts posted on the
Russian site.
One participant suggested that they might be a hoax because Cisco
was not capitalized in the source code. Yet, others quickly grew
tired of the discussion, changing the channel's title temporarily
to "do not keep commercial code on online computers... when
are people gonna learn."
The excerpts of the code posted by SecurityLab.ru named Ole Troan
and Kirk Lougheed as the authors. Both programmers appear to be
Cisco employees.
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