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Vista, Leopard and Linux to compete in hack contest

The three operating systems will be pitted against each other in an ethical hacking contest at the CanSecWest conference next month
Written by Tom Espiner, Contributor

Apple Mac, Microsoft Windows, and Linux operating systems are to be pitted against each other in an ethical hacking contest in Vancouver next month.

The contest is being run by the organisers of the CanSecWest security conference as a repeat of 2007's PWN to Own context, where security researchers competed to win a MacBook Pro and $10,000 (£5,000). The prize was shared between security researchers, Dino Dai Zovi and Shane Macauley, for their successful use of a zero-day QuickTime vulnerability, which they used to compromise the MacBook. The vulnerability was subsequently found to also affect Windows platforms.

The hacking competition at CanSecWest 2008 will pit the Linux, Leopard OS X and Vista operating systems against each other, according to CanSecWest organiser Dragos Ruiu.

"The fur is flying right now about which is more secure: Linux, Vista or Leopard," Ruiu told ZDNet.co.uk on Thursday. "Linux guys have their propaganda; Windows guys are saying this and that; Apple guys have buried their heads in the sand as usual. I guess the proof is in the pudding."

The prizes for the contest will be "several laptops", according to Ruiu. The security researcher was in Tokyo on Thursday when he spoke to ZDNet.co.uk, partly to organise a CanSecWest event and partly to go "shopping for laptops". Ruiu had not yet decided which laptops to buy, but was looking for something "new and thrilling".

"We want the prizes to inspire lust amongst geeks," said Ruiu. "It's going to be something lustworthy."

Last year the $10,000 prize money was supplied by security firm TippingPoint. This year's contest still needs a sponsor, and it is possible that the nature of the contest could still change, said Ruiu, although he declined to say what other form it might take.

CanSecWest 2008 will be held in Vancouver from 26 to 28 March.

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