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71% Positive

Analyzed from 384 words in the discussion.

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#zero#microsoft#criminal#exploit#distribution#activity#amendment#free#speech#hang

Discussion (15 Comments)Read Original on HackerNews

angry_octet•26 minutes ago
If you can't win the game, don't play by the rules.
JumpCrisscross•about 3 hours ago
> Hang on.. proof of concept exploit creation and distribution for zero days is “criminal activity” now?

Publicly publishing an exploit is so obviously First Amendment-protected activity that it’s almost tempting to want a test case.

avaer•about 2 hours ago
It's also quite the blame gymnastics. The code that enables the bad actors was written, published, and distributed at massive scale by Microsoft. The "crime" they are accusing the researcher of is telling the world about it.

It would be an interesting case if the defendant had good representation.

bigfatkitten•about 3 hours ago
I’d love to see Microsoft try it on. The defence witnesses in any such trial are going to show up holding all kinds of receipts that Microsoft would prefer didn’t see the light of day.
1970-01-01•about 2 hours ago
Straight to jail for you, citizen. Distribution of 0day for lulz has been criminal since 2022. You're free to try and get away with it under any and all amendments. IANAL!

https://krebsonsecurity.com/2022/06/what-counts-as-good-fait...

JumpCrisscross•about 2 hours ago
> Distribution of 0day for lulz has been criminal since 2022

Skimmed the article. Not seeing it support your claim.

1970-01-01•about 1 hour ago
Responsible disclosure is a normalized process in the courts. Skipping it opens you to, at very minimum, a plethora of civil lawsuits, including any and all the damages that resulted from skipping it. The odds are very much not great that you'll be OK.
gremlinunderway•about 1 hour ago
Re-read the beginning of the First Amendment, because it's such a common mistake that I'm surprised people still make it:

"Congress shall make no laws ... "

The first amendment bars the *government* from infringing on your free speech. It has zero standing or bearing on private citizens or corporations.

Which is why people crowing about it on social media or universities are completely oblivious to the fact that these organizations have absolutely zero responsibility to enable your free speech.

avaer•about 1 hour ago
Microsoft's blog is calling this criminal activity. They are threatening to bring in the government to go after this speech.

This is a first amendment issue.

1970-01-01•about 1 hour ago
>Hang on.. proof of concept exploit creation and distribution for zero days is “criminal activity” now?

This is what happens when you jump the gun and publish without doing any research. The author needs to lookup how the CFAA works. Now, yesterday, and a decade ago, you couldn't just drop some exploit and walk away rambling about your rights. Dumpster fire takes are everywhere online.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_Fraud_and_Abuse_Act#C...

angry_octet•24 minutes ago
You're referring to completely tangential cases.

Maybe you should look up who the author is.

TacticalCoder•about 1 hour ago
> Microsoft's stance on zero day exploits is a dumpster fire of their own making

The words "'s stance on zero day exploits" are unnecessary in the above sentence.

snickerbockers•about 2 hours ago
Those are some very bold legal threats considering their founder is an epstein associate.
1970-01-01•about 1 hour ago
Considering Bill hasn't been Microsoft CEO for only 2.6 decades, these things are probably directly related.