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Sites and press coverage related to Hotmail security holes.
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Describes a security hole by which a hacker can gain access to a user's Passport shopping profile by stealing their Hotmail cookie.
Passport authenticates a user for access to his credit cards and Web site accounts and passwords, to make life easy for on-line merchants and shoppers, and hackers and identity thieves. By Thomas C. Greene. (November 05, 2001)
Late Sunday night, Root Core, a group of computer security experts, published information exposing vulnerabilities in Microsoft's popular service. (August 21, 2001)
Details of how to read other people's messages have been posted on a website run by a group called Root Core and it has quickly spread to other sites and newsgroups. (August 20, 2001)
Some bright empiricist from Root-Core has discovered that anyone can log into their Hotmail account and then call messages from any other Hotmail account by crafting a URL with the second account's username and a valid message number. By Thomas C Greene. (August 20, 2001)
This isn't the first time that the folks who are gonna give us a internet wide universal login system had a hole. News and discussion. (August 20, 2001)
Explanation of JavaScript in HTML attachments security hole, since fixed. (October 05, 2000)
Article and discussion of HTML attachment attack. (May 10, 2000)
News and discussion. (August 31, 1999)
Microsoft's Web-based e-mail service suffered a damaging blow to its integrity Monday when a security breach came to light that made it so anyone's Hotmail messages could be read. By Robin Lloyd. (August 30, 1999)
Brief description of issue. (August 30, 1999)
Hotmail said it will mandate the use of cookies to plug a newly discovered security hole. (March 19, 1999)
Microsoft's Hotmail today claimed victory over the security holes that have put the free email firm on the hot seat this week. (August 27, 1998)
Microsoft's free Web-based email service Hotmail last night implemented a partial fix for a JavaScript security problem. (August 01, 1998)
Describes a security hole by which a hacker can gain access to a user's Passport shopping profile by stealing their Hotmail cookie.
Passport authenticates a user for access to his credit cards and Web site accounts and passwords, to make life easy for on-line merchants and shoppers, and hackers and identity thieves. By Thomas C. Greene. (November 05, 2001)
Late Sunday night, Root Core, a group of computer security experts, published information exposing vulnerabilities in Microsoft's popular service. (August 21, 2001)
Some bright empiricist from Root-Core has discovered that anyone can log into their Hotmail account and then call messages from any other Hotmail account by crafting a URL with the second account's username and a valid message number. By Thomas C Greene. (August 20, 2001)
Details of how to read other people's messages have been posted on a website run by a group called Root Core and it has quickly spread to other sites and newsgroups. (August 20, 2001)
This isn't the first time that the folks who are gonna give us a internet wide universal login system had a hole. News and discussion. (August 20, 2001)
Explanation of JavaScript in HTML attachments security hole, since fixed. (October 05, 2000)
Article and discussion of HTML attachment attack. (May 10, 2000)
News and discussion. (August 31, 1999)
Microsoft's Web-based e-mail service suffered a damaging blow to its integrity Monday when a security breach came to light that made it so anyone's Hotmail messages could be read. By Robin Lloyd. (August 30, 1999)
Brief description of issue. (August 30, 1999)
Hotmail said it will mandate the use of cookies to plug a newly discovered security hole. (March 19, 1999)
Microsoft's Hotmail today claimed victory over the security holes that have put the free email firm on the hot seat this week. (August 27, 1998)
Microsoft's free Web-based email service Hotmail last night implemented a partial fix for a JavaScript security problem. (August 01, 1998)
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November 15, 2020 at 18:41:20 UTC
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