, SecurityFocus 2006-01-27
ARLINGTON, Virginia -- A researcher has reopened the subject of beneficial worms, arguing that the capabilities of self-spreading code could perform better penetration testing inside networks, turning vulnerable systems into distributed scanners.
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Good worms back on the agenda
2006-01-30
Lucas C. Ferreira (1 replies)
Lucas C. Ferreira (1 replies)

The larva feeds of glucose in the spinal musculature, glutathione is being looked at as a protective measure, but its only going to infect those where mercury and decomposing polymorphism is present. I don't think that helps you either.
Anything else is risky, like growing a fungus, allow it to adapt to fungal or yeast reprogramming, that sends it the to the exterminator, the flash blast furnace, but no one knows for sure if it will wake up again.
A good solution for junk mail if nothing else.
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