The Morris Worm: When the Internet Nearly Broke
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About this listen
Learn about the technical vulnerabilities the worm exploited, including buffer overflows in Unix systems and weak password practices. Discover how a single programming error caused the worm to overwhelm thousands of computers across universities and research institutions, affecting systems at MIT, Stanford, Princeton, and NASA.
The episode covers the frantic response effort by computer scientists working around the clock to analyze the worm's code and develop countermeasures. We explore the significant financial impact and how this incident led to the creation of CERT (Computer Emergency Response Team) and established modern incident response protocols.
Morris became the first person prosecuted under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, setting important legal precedents for computer crimes. The Morris Worm marked the end of the internet's age of innocence and catalyzed the development of modern cybersecurity practices including coordinated vulnerability disclosure and network monitoring.
This cybersecurity podcast episode reveals how one graduate student's experiment fundamentally transformed internet security, establishing protocols and legal frameworks still used today. Essential listening for understanding cybersecurity history and the evolution of digital threat response.
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