Does it means they had NSA-corrupted engineers, or that they have better processes than others to find this kind of stuff that would happen everywhere?
I don't think the NSA is behind this. The NSA would have delivered backdoors that are very hard or impossible to find. These seem to be within reach of an ordinary in-detail security review of the system by anybody competent. A known backdoor is worthless.
Jupiner again? (Score:2)
Juniper already had a backdoor in VPN products. [arstechnica.com]
Does it means they had NSA-corrupted engineers, or that they have better processes than others to find this kind of stuff that would happen everywhere?
Re:Jupiner again? (Score:2)
I don't think the NSA is behind this. The NSA would have delivered backdoors that are very hard or impossible to find. These seem to be within reach of an ordinary in-detail security review of the system by anybody competent. A known backdoor is worthless.