Earlier today, an unknown hacker exploited a security vulnerability in ScrewTurn Wiki and replaced the altnetpedia site with pron links. I have restored the site and upgraded to the latest version of ScrewTurn, which is v2.0.30. (We were running v2.0.21 and the vulnerability was fixed in v2.0.24.) My bad for not keeping the site updated with latest. I apologize to the ALT.NET community for not being more vigilant with patches to the wiki software. I've added the ScrewTurn RSS feed to my reader to keep me apprised of future fixes.
To the unknown hacker, I hope that you're satisfied. I had booked the afternoon off to take my two boys (ages 3 and 5) to the Science Centre, but instead spent it undoing your evil.
About james.kovacs
James Kovacs is an independent architect, developer, trainer, and jack-of-all-trades, specializing in agile development using the .NET Framework. He is passionate about helping developers create flexible software using test-driven development (TDD), unit testing, object-relational mapping, dependency injection, refactoring, continuous integration, and related techniques. He is a founding member of the Plumbers @ Work podcast, which is syndicated by MSDN Canada Community Radio. His article, “Debug Leaky Apps: Identify And Prevent Memory Leaks In Managed Code”, appeared in the January 2007 issue of MSDN Magazine. James is a Microsoft Most Valuable Professional (MVP) - Solutions Architect and card-carrying member of ALT.NET, a group of software professionals continually looking for more effective ways to develop applications. He received his Masters degree from Harvard University.