Microsoft, Icahn offered Yahoo $2.3 bln annual revenue (Reuters)

Reuters - Microsoft Corp and billionaire investor Carl Icahn's joint proposal for Yahoo Inc , which was rejected on Saturday, included $2.3 billion in guaranteed annual revenue from search advertising for five years, people familiar with the matter said on Sunday. Read more…



Microsoft DNS Security Fix Knocks ZoneAlarm Users Offline (TechWeb)

10.07.2008 08:00 Computer Security - Source: Yahoo Microsoft

Users of Check Point Software's ZoneAlarm personal products are reporting that a released Tuesday by Microsoft to fix a serious security flaw breaks their connection to the Internet.

"For those of you using ZoneAlarm who installed the Windows updates today, you probably already know that your internet connection has died," wrote user 'Winchester73', in a post Tuesday on the popular .

Numerous other forum users reported experiencing the same problem. Dozens of posters on ZoneAlarm's own user forum also reported Internet outages. "I service and administer approximately 200 privately owned computers and I have received about 20+ telephone calls from users with this problem today," wrote 'Calken'.

A spokesman for Check Point said the company planned on releasing a fix later in the day on Wednesday.

The problem began when Microsoft on Tuesday sent patch number KB951748 to Windows users. The patch is designed to plug a security that leaves computers vulnerable to so-called attacks.

The vulnerability is widespread and affects products made by numerous and vendors beyond Microsoft. It was discovered by Dan Kaminsky, of the Seattle-based security firm IOActive.

Through a DNS attack, a can redirect Internet users' page requests to sites or other malicious pages. Various reports suggest that ZoneAlarm interprets the Microsoft patch itself as malicious code, and automatically severs the user's Internet connection in response.

Until a fix is issued, some forum users are working around the glitch by either uninstalling ZoneAlarm or the Microsoft patch. Either move, however, could leave their computers vulnerable to cyber-attacks.

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