Roland Piquepaille's Technology Trends
How new technologies are modifying our way of life

 
Web www.primidi.com



samedi 23 novembre 2002
 

After two days discussing about the nature of the universe -- a big computer or a collection of algorithms -- it's time to get back to basic technology. So today, we'll talk about a brand new and excellent idea: stopping the infection of our computers by viruses and worms by simply delaying new connections to the outside world.

The Economist has the story for you

Early in the morning of July 19th 2001, a variant of a computer virus known as Code Red started spreading across the Internet. Within 14 hours, some 350,000 machines were infected. Like most modern virus outbreaks, it happened too quickly for people to intervene.
Matthew Williamson, a researcher at the Hewlett-Packard laboratories in Bristol, England, has now thought of a way to hamper the spread of a virus until engineers can finish their pizzas and get to the scene of the crime. He presented it at a recent conference at the Santa Fe Institute in New Mexico.
Dr Williamson's approach is based on the observation that computers infected by a virus behave differently in one key respect from uninfected computers. Once a virus has infected a machine, it will generally try to connect that machine to as many new computers as possible, as fast as possible, so as to spread itself further. A virus called Nimda, for example, gets its hosts to make new connections at a rate of up to 400 a second. Uninfected machines normally make connections at a far less frantic rate.

So he had the idea of limiting this rate. And does his idea work? Yes.

Recently, the throttle was tested on a group of 16 machines connected in an isolated network. When one of these machines was exposed to Nimda without the throttle being installed, all but one of the group were infected within 12 minutes. However, in one test when the throttle was applied, it took 13 minutes for a second machine to be infected, and half an hour for a third.
Throttling viruses in this way is such a simple idea that it raises the question of why it has not been thought of before. According to Dr Williamson, part of the reason is that most people think of computer security in a binary -- ie, "on" or "off" -- fashion. Throttling merely slows things down, making a system resilient rather than completely resistant.

I have a simple word to qualify this new idea: amazing! Hundreds or thousands of developers are working to improve Web servers security day after day, and nobody thought about this. Really incredible!

Source: The Economist print edition, November 21, 2002


5:58:38 PM   Permalink        


Click here to visit the Radio UserLand website. © Copyright 2007 Roland Piquepaille.
Last update: 01/04/2007; 19:56:16.


November 2002
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
          1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29 30
Oct   Dec


Personal Links



Other Links

Ars Technica
Bloglines
Daily Rotation News
Dave Winer
Danger Room
del.icio.us
Engadget
Gizmodo
John Robb
Jon Udell
OhGizmo!
Really Magazine
Robots.net
Slashdot
Smart Mobs
TG Daily
WorldChanging
ZDNet Blogs


Drop me a note via Radio
Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.

E-mail me directly at
pique@noos.fr

RSS subscription for Radio users
Subscribe to "Roland Piquepaille's Technology Trends" in Radio UserLand.

RSS feed for others
Click to see the XML version of this web page.