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Zero-day holiday
Kelly Martin, 2006-01-04

A few hundred million Windows XP machines lay vulnerable on the Web today, a week after a zero-day exploit was discovered. Meanwhile, new approaches and ideas from the academic world - that focus exclusively on children - may give us hope for the future after all.

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Zero-day holiday 2006-01-04
Anonymous (2 replies)
Re: Zero-day holiday 2006-01-05
Kelly Martin (4 replies)
Re: Re: Zero-day holiday 2006-01-05
Jack
Re: Re: Zero-day holiday 2006-01-05
assurbanipal
Immoral, etc. 2006-01-05
Andrew Jones
Re: Re: Zero-day holiday 2006-01-06
Anonymous
Re: Zero-day holiday 2006-01-05
Anonymous
Zero-day holiday 2006-01-04
Nick
Zero-day holiday 2006-01-04
Anonymous
Zero-day holiday 2006-01-05
Matthew Murphy (1 replies)
incorrect 2006-01-05
Kelly Martin (2 replies)
Re: incorrect 2006-01-05
Not the original poster
Re: incorrect 2006-01-07
Matthew Murphy (1 replies)
thanks 2006-01-12
Kelly Martin
Zero-day holiday 2006-01-05
Anonymous
Zero-day holiday 2006-01-05
hhhobbit
Zero-day holiday 2006-01-05
horror_vacui
Zero-day holiday 2006-01-05
Anonymous
Zero-day holiday 2006-01-05
M. Amos
Zero-day holiday 2006-01-05
Anonymous
Zero-day holiday 2006-01-05
Anonymous
Not a real solution 2006-01-05
Mike Warot (1 replies)
Re: Not a real solution 2006-01-06
Khem C (1 replies)
Re: Re: Not a real solution 2006-01-07
Anonymous
Zero-day holiday 2006-01-12
Nicolas Falliere
I particularly enjoyed your column this month. It was very well-written and constructed. Though I don't know if the $100 computer will be a success (I hope so), the comparison with Bill Gates' empire and the omnipresence of Windows was highly interesting.

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