Java Insecurity - References

  1. Gary McGraw and Edward Felten. Java Security: Hostile Applets, Holes and Antidotes. John Wiley & Sons, New York, 1996.
  2. Mark D. LaDue. Pushing the Limits of Java Security. Tricks of the Java Programming Gurus, Chapter 23. SAMS.net Publishing, Indianapolis, 1996.
  3. Mark D. LaDue. Java Security: Whose Business is it? The Online Business Consultant. May, 1996.
  4. J. Steven Fitzinger and Marianne Mueller. Java Security. Sun Microsystems, Inc. 1996.
  5. SunOS 5.5 eeprom(1M) man page. Sun MicroSystems, Inc. July, 1995.
  6. Hobbit (alias). Netcat 1.10 (Program Documentation). March 20, 1996.
  7. Edward Felten, Dirk Balfanz, Drew Dean, and Dan S. Wallach. Web Spoofing: An Internet Con Game. Technical Report 540-96, Department of Computer Science, Princeton University. December 1996.
  8. Symantec Corporation (Press Release). Symantec Announces First Native Java Virus Scanner and Leading Edge Virus Analysis Technology. Symantec Corporation, March 27, 1996.
  9. Frederick B Cohen. Computer Viruses - Theory and Experiments. Computers & Security, Volume 6, Number 1, pp.22-35. Elsevier Advanced Technology, Oxford, 1987.
  10. Frederick B. Cohen. It's Alive! The New Breed of Living Computer Programs. John Wiley & Sons, New York, 1994.
  11. Tom Duff. Viral Attacks on UNIX Systems. Proceedings of the Winter 1989 USENIX Conference, pp.165-171. USENIX Association, January, 1989.
  12. Tom Duff. Experience with Viruses on UNIX Systems. Computing Systems, Volume 2, Number 2, pp.155-171. USENIX Association, Spring, 1989.
  13. M. Douglas McIlroy. Virology 101. Computing Systems, Volume 2, Number 2, pp.173-181. USENIX Association, Spring, 1989.
  14. Peter V. Radatti. The Plausibility of UNIX Virus Attacks. CyberSoft, Incorporated. April, 1996.
  15. Ken Thompson. Reflections on Trusting Trust. Communications of the ACM, Volume 27, Number 8, pp.761-763. August, 1984.