Security researcher Mike Lynn roiled the Black Hat conference Wednesday when he resigned from his job at Internet Security Systems to deliver a talk about a serious vulnerability in Cisco IOS, the operating system powering its routers, defying efforts by the router manufacturer and his former employer to block the presentation.
In the aftermath, Lynn reached a legal settlement with Cisco and ISS in which he agreed to erase his research material on the vulnerability, to keep secret the details of the attack, and to refrain from distributing copies of his presentation, among other concessions.
Now facing an FBI investigation -- and sudden celebrity status in the tech world -- Lynn discusses the events leading up to this week's disclosure, and what he thinks it means for the security of the internet in an exclusive interview with Wired News.
View: Wired News Interview
In the aftermath, Lynn reached a legal settlement with Cisco and ISS in which he agreed to erase his research material on the vulnerability, to keep secret the details of the attack, and to refrain from distributing copies of his presentation, among other concessions.
Now facing an FBI investigation -- and sudden celebrity status in the tech world -- Lynn discusses the events leading up to this week's disclosure, and what he thinks it means for the security of the internet in an exclusive interview with Wired News.
















More government noses where they don't belong. Hide the truth, sweep the dirty little secrets under the rug and banish anyone who says differently to prison.
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