Symantec Screwup Is 'Worse Than Any Virus'

Symantec Screwup Is ‘Worse Than Any Virus’

Dec 7, 2007
1 minute read
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A routine update from Symantec Security Response wreaked havoc on a California company’s clientele this week when it inadvertently tagged a program produced by Solid Oak Software as a virus and cut off the Internet access of Solid Oak customers.

Symantec on Monday released a virus definition update that incorrectly identified Solid Oak’s CyberSitter filtering program as a virus. Depending on the version of Symantec’s Norton Antivirus product that Solid Oak customers were running, CyberSitter files were either deleted or banned from use by Norton, according to Solid Oak.

On Friday, a Symantec spokesman said that the company had issued a fix.

Before that, however, Solid Oak customers including schools, libraries and personal accounts, were not provided with a recovery mechanism and subsequently lost Internet access. Solid Oak did not have an exact number of those affected, but it likely numbers in the tens of thousands, according to a spokeswoman.

Read the full story on PCMag.com:Symantec Screwup Is ‘Worse Than Any Virus’

Check out eWEEK.com’s Security Center for the latest security news, reviews and analysis. And for insights on security coverage around the Web, take a look at eWEEK’s Security Watch blog.

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