IT IS NO secret that Microsoft Windows is insecure by design and almost 1 in 2 Windows PCs is a zombie, but the BBC has just done something bizarre which is also a violation of the law.
An investigation by the BBC into cybercrime may itself have broken UK computer crime law.
BBC Click got its hands on a botnet of 22,000 compromised PCs from an underground forum. It used these machines to send spam to two accounts it had established with Gmail and Hotmail. The programme also used these zombie machines to show how they might be used in a denial of service attack.
The result is loads of dire warnings about the perils of bot nets and shedloads of long 'easy to follow' explanations from the 'zany' BBC tech presenter.
Software used to control thousands of home computers has been acquired online by the BBC as part of an investigation into global cyber crime.
The technology programme Click has demonstrated just how at risk PCs are of being taken over by hackers.
Almost 22,000 computers made up Click's network of hijacked machines, which has now been disabled.
The BBC has now warned users that their PCs are infected, and advised them on how to make their systems more secure.
Comments
Mike Brown
2009-03-13 00:22:47
Neither has any follow-up article that I've seen anywhere mentioned "Windows" (present company excepted, of course!)
Roy Schestowitz
2009-03-13 00:29:01
A common complaint they receive is that BBC's 'gentle introductions' to things cast "Windows" as "computer". This helps perpetuate the myth that there is no choice.
Needs Sunlight
2009-03-13 08:25:36