An online shop that was selling the source code for two
computer programs has abruptly suspended its operations, citing a
"redesign" of its "business model".
The Source Code Club opened its doors on earlier this week,
using an e-mail posting to an online discussion group to advertise
the availability of source code and design documents for two
products: the Dragon intrusion detection system (IDS) software from
Enterasys Networks and peer-to-peer (P2P) server and client
software from Napster, now owned by Roxio.
The group's webpage displayed a message saying the club had
ceased operations due to "fears our customers faced".
The group used a web page with an address in the Ukraine to
advertise its wares, saying it was selling "corporate intelligence"
to its customers, along with other, unnamed, services, according to
a message posted to the full-disclosure mailing list by a group or
individual using the name "Larry Hobbles".
The group offered the Enterasys Dragon IDS 6.1 source code for
$16,000 (£8,600) and the Napster code for $10,000, according Kevin
Flanagan, an Enterasys spokesman.
The club's website was renamed the "former SCC page", with the
group saying it plans to re-emerge, but that it needed to change
its business model to ease customers' fears.
Enterasys is working with the FBI to investigate the club's
claims, but company representatives are still not convinced that
its product source code was stolen, Flanagan said.
Even if the theft did occur, the company is confident that the
code was obtained from "media" such as a computer hard drive or CD,
rather than the company's network, Flanagan said.
That opinion is based on a structural analysis of the source
code files exhibited on the club's website, he said.
Flanagan could not say how media containing the source code
might have leaked, citing an ongoing criminal investigation, but
said it was theoretically possible a company developer copied it
onto a CD or other portable media "for convenience", even though
the company prohibits such copying.
Dragon IDS 6.1 is around one year old, and customers who
upgraded to Versions 6.2 and 6.3 were protected, because
significant differences in the later versions make it difficult to
carry out attacks on the upgrades using the 6.1 code as a model, he
said.
Enterasys did not contact "Larry Hobbles" or the Source Code
Club. Instead, the company turned directly to law enforcement,
Flanagan said.
He declined to speculate on why the web page was offline, saying
only that "people who are doing overtly illegal things have lots of
reasons to disappear".
The company will continue to pursue the source code theft, as
well as any Source Code Customers who want to benefit from the
alleged theft, he said.
Enterasys and Roxio are just the latest companies to contend
with the alleged theft of intellectual property from shadowy online
criminals.
In May, Cisco Systems confirmed that it was working with the FBI
to investigate source code file thefts from the company's
Internetwork Operating System (IOS) after IOS source code files
were posted on a Russian website, a small piece of what was said to
be more than 800Mbytes of code.
In February, Microsoft said it was investigating a source code
leak from the Windows NT and Windows 2000 operating systems to P2P
file sharing networks.
Paul Roberts writes for IDG News Service