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