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Hackers hint of plan to unleash havoc ( 2003-08-01 13:05) (Agencies) US Government and industry experts consider brewing hacker activity a precursor to a broad Internet attack that would target enormous numbers of computers vulnerable from a flaw in Windows software from Microsoft Corp. Experts described an unusual confluence of conditions that heightens prospects for a serious disruption soon. They cite the high numbers of potential victims and increasingly sophisticated attack tools already tested successfully by hackers recently. An alert distributed Thursday among US government agencies warned of "widespread scanning and exploitation" of victim computers by hackers who were developing "improved and automated exploit tools." The Homeland Security Department cautioned Wednesday that it had detected an "Internet-wide increase in scanning" for victim computers. In an unusually ominous alert, it warned the threat could cause a "significant impact" on the Internet. Experts advised computer users with renewed urgency to apply a free repairing patch that Microsoft has offered on its Web site since July 16, when it acknowledged that the flaw affected nearly all versions of its flagship Windows operating system software. Applying Microsoft's repairing patch takes a few moments for home users but is a more daunting challenge for large corporations. The Microsoft flaw affects Windows technology used to share data files across computer networks. It involves a category of vulnerabilities known as "buffer overflows," which can trick software into accepting dangerous commands. "People are definitely aggressively trying to patch this," said Ken Dunham, an analyst at iDefense Inc., an online security company.
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