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Vindication?
As I said back in August 2002, this whole situation is ridiculous (yes, I mis-spelled it then...), but very common. Though this was the first case I knew of where an individual was arrested and convicted of the crime of making other customers aware of a problem which the company failed to fix, I myself have been threatened by companies in the past for disclosing vulnerabilities in their hardware/software, and it seems to be a growing trend that instead of calling the security engineers, the first knee-jerk reaction to a vulnerability disclosure is to call the police. I hope that if any more of these cases are brought to trial, this will serve as case-law to prevent those accused from suffering the same misguided punishment that McDanel suffered.
Those who know me know that I have a deep, and sometimes perverted (yes, I know that word isn't right, but it is the closest word I can think of to describe what I am trying to say,) love for the law. And even with this love for the law, I still find this case to be disgusting since it in itself is the ultimate corruption of the law, using the legal system to protect a companies flawed image instead of dealing with the flaw and moving on. I just hope nobody else has to suffer this abuse of the law (I know, a daily occurance in many cases.)
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