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Security

Voting Machine Hackers Have 5 Tips to Save the Next Election

posted onAugust 7, 2017
by l33tdawg

American democracy depends on the sanctity of the vote. In the wake of the 2016 election, that inviolability is increasingly in question, but given that there are 66 weeks until midterm elections, and 14 weeks until local 2017 elections, there's plenty of time to fix the poor state of voting technology, right? Wrong. To secure voting infrastructure in the US in time for even the next presidential election, government agencies must start now.

Meet Mia Ash, the Fake Woman Iranian Hackers Used to Lure Victims

posted onJuly 28, 2017
by l33tdawg

Mia Ash is a 30-year-old British woman with two art school degrees, a successful career as a photographer, and plenty of friends—more than 500 on Facebook, and just as many on LinkedIn. A disproportionate number of those friends happen to be Middle Eastern men, and when she posts coy selfies to Facebook, they shower her with likes. Her intriguing relationship status: "It's complicated." No kidding. Mia Ash doesn't exist.

Bugs in Popular Hacker Tools Open the Door to Striking Back

posted onJuly 26, 2017
by l33tdawg

The concept of "hacking back" has drawn attention—and generated controversy—lately as geopolitics focuses increasingly on the threat of cyberwar. The idea that cyberattack victims should be legally allowed to hack their alleged assailants has even motivated a bill, the Active Cyber Defense Certainty Act, that representative Tom Graves of Georgia has shared for possible introduction this fall. And though many oppose hacking back as a dangerous and morally ambiguous slippery slope, research shows that, for better or worse, in many cases it wouldn't be all that hard.

Watch Hackers Take Over a Segway With Someone On It

posted onJuly 20, 2017
by l33tdawg

When you imagine riding a Segway MiniPro electric scooter, your biggest concern is probably falling on your face. Much lower on that list? The notion that attackers could remotely hack your ride, make it stop short, or even drive you into traffic. Unfortunately, as one reacher found, they could have done just that.

The future of macOS security: Baked-in protection and third-party tools

posted onJuly 18, 2017
by l33tdawg

Anyone in the information security industry who’s interested in Mac security probably knows who Patrick Wardle is. Apart from being Chief Security Researcher at Synack, he’s also the creator of a number of security tools for macOS, which he makes available for free on his Objective-See project site.

Yet another massive Bitcoin exchange has been hacked

posted onJuly 5, 2017
by l33tdawg

Digital currencies like Bitcoin are very hot right now, and hackers are apparently looking to take advantage of that, as one of the largest Bitcoin exchanges in the world was just hacked.

Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies surged in the past few months, which explains why people with malicious intentions would be looking to steal this precious virtual coin.