After the "clerical error door" and the "loophole door" Jinshan was again referred to as lying

by cacard on 2010-05-29 19:45:58

Recently, Wang Hai, a well-known anti-counterfeit, sued the "always famous" Kingsoft company. Wang Hai sued that on May 17 this year, he bought a combination of Jinshan drug bully. However, he checked and found that the official website of Kingsoft said that "in AV-C certification, the virus detection rate is the first in the world" is actually the last. Jinshan public relations manager Comrade Li Xiaoguang firmly denied Wang Hai's allegations. Manager Li said, "We - in - product promotion, absolutely - according to the report - carried out! There can be no such thing as - false propaganda!" Less than half a day after the firm denial of Manager Li, the CEO of Jinshan Company came forward to clarify that it was a clerical error of the staff, which was originally "the world's penultimate", and the clerical error gave the "countdown" to the leak.

Attention, Comrade CEO said, this is a clerical error. What a blessing! Or the CEO comrade of Jinshan company is very careful, timely found so many employees "accidentally" committed a clerical error, otherwise how many careful "Wang Hai" stand up to uncover this big lie ah.

Jinshan Company in the "clerical error door", today again into a new crisis of integrity "loophole door". On May 24, China's National Information Security Vulnerability Database confirmed the existence of a high-risk kernel local rights exploitation vulnerability (National vulnerability database number: CNVD-2010-00979) in Kingsoft Network Shield, and published details about the exploitation of the vulnerability. On the same day, the foreign authoritative vulnerability agency Secunia studied and included the vulnerability of Jinshan network Shield, and at the same time, the leak

The holes were interpreted and classified by themselves (SA ID: SA39916). At the same time, two authoritative security agencies at home and abroad confirmed that there are high-risk vulnerabilities in Kingsoft network Shield, putting Kingsoft, which has been a high-profile denial of software vulnerabilities, in a very embarrassing situation.