On Fri, 09 Jul 2004 22:41:59 +0200, Matthias Benkmann <matthias@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> said: > So I have one example to back up my claim. Now it's your turn. Give me a > worm that my scheme would not have protected me against. That's all you > need to do to convince me. Easy, isn't it? No need to give me lengthy > lectures. Just give me one URL. If you can't do that, don't bother > replying. You're wasting your time, because you're telling me things I > already know. Any worm that doesn't invoke execve() won't be slowed down in the slightest by your scheme. The only reason why there aren't many examples of that is because nobody feels like beating their heads against the wall re-inventing the wheel when execve("/bin/sh") will do the work for you. Yes, your scheme *will* provide security. The problem is that usually, people want something resembling *usability* too. And your scheme would totally fail on that. Most notably, the *real* reason why Slapper wouldn't hit a machine modified as you suggest isn't because /bin/sh wasn't there, but because Apache wouldn't run in such an environment... Ponder that for a while... But of course you already know that....
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