Google Blocks Porn In Base, Patches Appliance 122
An anonymous reader writes "The search giant has moved to fix a problem in Google Base which didn't properly block pornographic material in their search results. According to Google, the filter was broken for 'some period of time' but the company didn't elaborate. Nathan Weinberg could have been one of the first to report the incident on his blog, Inside Google, writing: 'Holy crap, there is a lot of porn at Google Base! Looks like, just like Google Images, Google Base could become a huge source of porn, and eventually a place where porn will be sold. I even noticed some movie reviews.'" They've also recently corrected a problem with their search appliance. geo_2677 wrote to mention a Securityfocus.com article discussing the rapid patching of the Google search boxes in response to a vulnerability.
"Rapid patching" gone horribly wrong (Score:5, Interesting)
A small sample of 43 appliances taken this week showed that 23 remained vulnerable, 8 were patched, and the status of 12 could not be determined. If this sample is representative of all deployed Google Search Appliances, more than half may still be vulnerable.
A patch that hasn't made it to half of the vulnerable devices? We've got a problem here. Google should have made it clear to the owners of the Search Appliance that there's a patch to install. (Fault the media while we're at it... this is the first
You'd think Google would have built in an auto-updater, but clearly not with this low of a response rate.
Re:"Rapid patching" gone horribly wrong (Score:4, Interesting)
> Search Appliance.)
I'm Sorry? "The media" exists to make money, and I'm not sure if you're reading the business press lately but they've been doing just fine.
If a company is relying upon another company then it's between those companies to sort out any practical problems. The media has correctly decided that the general public couldn't give a toss about whether there's a new version of software for some piece of kit or other.
You obviously believe that the media exists to protect the public...
Re:"Rapid patching" gone horribly wrong (Score:1, Insightful)
The IT folks or whoever is in charge just may not have gotten around to it, don't think the risk is there, or whatever. It's the same thing as when there's a recall tha
It's not clear at all (Score:4, Insightful)
Regarding the sample boxes they couldn't determine the status for, they may be firewalled by companies who don't want to risk unforseen vulnerabilities. Regarding the ones that are accessible but not patched, is it possible the owners are also blocking updates? If you have a dedicated search appliance in a situation where you can't really afford it going down for an unknown period of time, would you risk patching until you'd heard from others that the patch didn't introduce any new instabilities? Especially since it's a black (or blue) box, so a hard crash might mean having to send it back?
Win2000 and WinXP have autoupdaters, also. Many of them are not completely patched, either. The users have either never enabled, or disabled, that feature. The administrative interface on Google appliances could allow that level of control, also.
You broke it, you bought it. (Score:1, Informative)
That depends on the design.*
One can have either a roll-back, or switch-over to a known configuration.
Two one can have a remote-login from Google HQ to fix whatever's needed.
The only reason to send something back is if the hardware is physically broken.
*Remember these basically are custom computers. Not DELL generic, stick any handy OS on, cross your fingers and pray, computers you put together from left-over parts.
new button (Score:5, Funny)
Re:new button (Score:1)
The old one is better... (Score:2)
argh ... (Score:3, Funny)
can't
Re:argh ... (Score:2)
Pr0n... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Pr0n... (Score:2)
I know that was meant to be funny, but...
The "information superhighway" internet that Al Gore pushed for ARPANET to be turned into would have connected schools and libraries only, and contained only educational materials. It would still have been controlled, and tightly regulated, by the government. The true, private sector internet that we have today simply wouldn't have existed. That's a very different world. We have a much better internet than Al Gore wanted. Personally, I'm glad that today we have a v
ALL YOUR GOOGLE BASE (Score:1, Funny)
--
No, really.
ALL YOUR PR0N ARE BELONG TO BASE (Score:1)
Meanwhile, back at Google HQ (Score:1)
Concerned, but delighted (Score:2, Funny)
This isn't some Google search tool to find Bin Laden is it? I've not used Base before, what does it do?
Re:Concerned, but delighted (Score:1)
Re:Concerned, but delighted (Score:1)
Interesting article here [guardian.co.uk].
Re:Concerned, but delighted (Score:2)
Re:Concerned, but delighted (Score:1, Troll)
Sure, but the CIA gave it such wide currency that it caught on. Now it's been adopted by the terrorists themselves. I suppose it was a bit like what happened with words like 'geek' or 'otaku'.
Amusing. Al-Qa'ida didn't exist, but now thanks to the CIA doing its PR every last eejit with a pipe-bomb claims to be affiliated to it.
Re:Concerned, but delighted (Score:2)
Really? Known by whom? Although I know that that's what it translates to, this is the first time I've heard anyone refer to it as "The Base".
Every time I've seen it in the (English-language) news, they refer to it as "Al Qaida", not "The Base". Hmm. a quick search of "The Base" on Google news lists no references to Al Qaida as "The Base", but a search for "Al Qaida" reveals 28000 results. This leads me to believe that Al Qaida is NOT
[offtopic] What the ..... popover ads on Slashdot? (Score:3, Interesting)
I think it was some kind of DHTML thing - anyone else got this as well?
Re:[offtopic] What the ..... popover ads on Slashd (Score:1)
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:[offtopic] What the ..... popover ads on Slashd (Score:2)
So it's not just me. Argh!!! Well, message to the editors: one 100% foolproof way to make sure that I will *never* take some OSTG survey, is to shove it in m
Re:[offtopic] What the ..... popover ads on Slashd (Score:2)
Re:[offtopic] What the ..... popover ads on Slashd (Score:1, Informative)
On comment pages, the comments are last to load, and the sidebar ad is centred until the width of the comments are established (or something) and then it all looks right.
"willing to take a survey?" ? (Score:2)
Proof for the non-believers (Score:2)
Re:[offtopic] What the ..... popover ads on Slashd (Score:5, Interesting)
*images.slashdot.org/*.js
*images-aud.slashdot.org*
*an.tacoda.net*
*falkag*
lots of funcky js gets loaded by slash by default. I block all this shit and slashdot loads twice as fast.
Re:[offtopic] What the ..... popover ads on Slashd (Score:1)
Re:[offtopic] What the ..... popover ads on Slashd (Score:2)
Re:[offtopic] What the ..... popover ads on Slashd (Score:2)
Free porn websites are a breeze with this, to be honest. Collect all destination hostnames f
Re:[offtopic] What the ..... popover ads on Slashd (Score:2, Funny)
Re:[offtopic] What the ..... popover ads on Slashd (Score:2)
Oh and BTW, thank you, http://www.noscript.net/ [noscript.net]
Re:[offtopic] What the ..... popover ads on Slashd (Score:1)
Rooting the Applicance (Score:4, Interesting)
E.g. supposedly the appliance is derived from their main codebase. So if you get a box and figure out some exploits, perhaps you've figured out how to exploit the thousands of machines that Google uses to crawl.
It is a bit like Cisco fiasco recently: they give a smart guy a box, he can find some problems (and get in trouble at Black Hat) -- but if he finds flaws he can exploit thousands of boxes out there.
On the other hand, if Cisco didn't give you your own box to poke and prod, you might never discover the flaws in the boxes out there in the universe (before getting caught) -- it would just take too long, esp. if the bug was timing dependent. Same for Google -- the selling of the appliance, for what little money it brings in, reveals info to bad guys. A risk-averse shop might forgo that income completely.
Re:Rooting the Applicance (Score:2)
On the surface this sounds right, but be careful.
You basically just stated that closed source is more secure than open source in this instance and I think the *nix crowd may eat you for Thanksgiving Day dinner with that attitude. Closing the source and hiding your insecure code is not the way to secure a
Re:Rooting the Applicance (Score:2)
NOT blocked! (Score:5, Insightful)
You can still get all the pr0n you want. The problem was that SafeSearch was including pr0n in the results. Some dad uploaded pictures of his two-year-old daughter to share with family. But, when he searched for those pictures, he found a hell of a lot more than he was looking for.
Considering the society we live in, SafeSearch is a good default--after all, you wouldn't want something that could easily get you fired popping up on your monitor just for doing an innocent search. It's also good of Google to offer the simple ability to tell them not to be your nanny.
Cheers,
b&
Re:NOT blocked! (Score:1)
Blame Google when he searches for Jasmine! [com.com]
Re:NOT blocked! (Score:1)
It's also good of Google to offer the simple ability to tell them not to be your nanny.
Compared to Googles' image search it's not quite as simple for the cookie-blockers amongst us. Instead of allowing a single cookie at a precise address 'images.google.com.au' (in my case), using Google Base without the filter requires you to allow 'google.com' and all the cookies that entails.
I am aware that I'm somewhat of a paranoid freak.
Re:NOT blocked! (Score:2)
Got onto base.google.porn
Type 'porn'.
Oggle.
I an *not* logged into google, so safe search is presumably on.
Re:NOT blocked! (Score:1)
Re:NOT blocked! (Score:1)
If it ain't broke, don't fix it. (Score:5, Funny)
Is there a site... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Is there a site... (Score:2, Interesting)
In other news... (Score:4, Funny)
What a surprise! (Score:5, Funny)
In other news, scientists announce that snow is cold, and that bears defecate in the wooded environments.
Re:What a surprise! (Score:2)
That's not news. The news that surprises most people is that the bears use rabbits to wipe their asses.
Blocks what? (Score:4, Funny)
Of course. (Score:4, Funny)
With a name like that (Score:4, Insightful)
"Todd Ripley, a real estate investor in Asheville, North Carolina, noticed the problem on Tuesday morning after he uploaded photos of his 2-year-old daughter Jasmine onto his Google Base page. He planned to direct his family to the page but decided against it after a search for "Jasmine" turned up some unsavoury results despite the use of the SafeSearch filter."
If he'd just named his daughter Phyllis, or Martha, or Gertrude...
And why did he need to search for "Jasmine" to tell his family where to find photos? Couldn't he just use a URL? And did he think that there was any chance that a search for "Jasmine" would actually find his daughter's photos from the mounds of other info out there???
Re:With a name like that (Score:2, Funny)
Re:With a name like that (Score:2)
Re:With a name like that (Score:2)
[1] Probably more amusing in the UK, where cheap tabloids traditionally put a nude model on page 3.
Riiiight (Score:1)
Re:With a name like that (Score:2)
A year ago I made my mother and father's start page Google. Now, inst
Google's recent security problems (Score:4, Informative)
Title: Google Talk Denial of Service - BenjiBug [securityfocus.com]
Google Talk's automatic update mechanism (which can't be turned off) checks to see if the downloaded file matches a signature, but it doesn't check the size of the file. So it can be forced to compute a hash of a 1 gig file, crashing the machine.
Killer Empty Sender Message [securityfocus.com]
echo kill | nail -s Kill -r "" victim (at) gmail (dot) com [email concealed]
crashes Google Talk
Google Talk cleartext proxy credentials vulnerability [securityfocus.com]
Google Talk stores the GMail login details securely, but not the proxy authentication credentials
Not to mention the GMail bug discussed on
Ah, the perpetual beta..
Inside Google..... (Score:1)
Poor Kids (Score:1)
Re:Poor Kids (Score:2)
Re:Poor Kids (Score:1)
Hey Porn Sites, Quit You're Whining! (Score:1, Informative)
Illegal (Score:1)
Re:Illegal (Score:1)
Not Fair (Score:1)
What? no link?
Re:And where is the problem with porn? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:And where is the problem with porn? (Score:1, Insightful)
(Where's the logic in that? For me as a user a repressive society is a repressive society. I don't care if companys, private organisations or the state take my freedoms.)
Re:And where is the problem with porn? (Score:4, Insightful)
Sure. You are free to use a different company. Using a different government is not always possible.
Re:And where is the problem with porn? (Score:1, Insightful)
The problem is that google has such a monopoly that they can dictate what websites succeed and which fail. That is to much power for a single corporation as far as I'm concerned. Just go to http://www.google-watch.org/ [google-watch.org] and read some of the stuff there. It would be just as meaningless.
Geeks seem to be all to eager to suck googles dick. Google executives appear on the cover of magazines wearing Armani suits with Converse shoes and naive geeks are all "OMG! Those guys ar
Re:And where is the problem with porn? (Score:1)
Maybe because, unlike MS, google actually doesn't try to screw OSS over.
Re:And where is the problem with porn? (Score:1, Interesting)
To further confuse the issue. Here is the list of the major charitable contributions made by Microsoft (or is it Micro$oft, hurrr!!) as of 2000.
$1 billion over 20 years to establish the Gates Millennium Scholarship
Program, which will support promising minority students through college
and s
Renunciation of Citizenship (Score:1, Offtopic)
http://travel.state.gov/law/citizenship/citizensh
Anything is possible, just not always probable.
Re:And where is the problem with porn? (Score:2)
Re:And where is the problem with porn? (Score:2)
Ever tried that from behind the Great Firewall?
Beacuse its not censorship? (Score:3, Insightful)
Once you talk about government censoring free speech ( its debateable if porn falls under that category in the first place ) then we an issue to discuss.
However, even with your example, China is an sovereign country. It has a right to declare a type of questionable speech illegal if they wish, as long as it doesnt deprive people of basic human rights in the process.
Re:Beacuse its not censorship? (Score:2)
And i do agree that free speech extends beyond the basics of criticizing government, but there are limits to what is 'protected speech'. I happen to think porn does not qualify. Porn is a product, not a 'speech'. ( not saying it should be banned or not, just that it shouldnt be protected under the concept of free speech )
Re:And where is the problem with porn? (Score:1)
Re:And where is the problem with porn? (Score:1)
That's the difference.
Re:Try meeting people (Score:2)