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Microsoft Revises Statement on Computer Network Break-In.(Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News)

Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News, October, 2000 by Ackerman, Elise

Oct. 31--As the hunt for the hacker who broke into Microsoft Corp.'s computer network continues, the software giant moved to contain the public relations fallout caused by the electronic burglary.

In an update posted Sunday on its Web site, the company put forth a different and more benign version of the break-in than it reported last week, saying that the "unauthorized access" to its corporate computers had lasted only 12 days, rather than the five or six weeks reported in some initial statements from the company. The Redmond, Wash.-based company also emphasized that the break-in did not result from flaws in Microsoft software.

Spokesman Rick Miller said that the company "erred on the side of caution" in its original assessment of the attack, but that...

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