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NSA

NSA Chief to Pitch "Common Core Values" to Hackers at DEFCON 20

posted onJuly 25, 2012
by l33tdawg

Gen. Alexander will not be fair game for fed-spotting contest

The hacker community is the ultimate moral gray.  While many hackers engage in malicious activities on a daily basis, and routinely violate U.S. local, state, and federal laws, they also have been vital over the last two decades in protecting consumers.  In the 1990s corporations recklessly stored data using poor practices which threatened to allow personal financial information to fall into the hands of truly malicious individuals. 

NSA declines to disclose details of Google deal despite FOIA request

posted onMarch 21, 2012
by l33tdawg

The Electronic Privacy Information Center originally filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request with the NSA which was denied and is today having it's appeal heard. The center is trying to obtain information about a deal the NSA cut with Google following an attack on Gmail by Chinese hackers in 2010. 

In its Freedom of Information Act request, the information center is requesting:

NSA constructs hardened Android, unleashes it on world

posted onJanuary 18, 2012
by l33tdawg

The National Security Agency (NSA) has released SE Android, a security-enhanced version of Android, which provides and enforces stricter access-control policies than those found in the popular mobile operating system by default.

SE Android is based on NSA's previous research into mandatory access controls (MACs) that gave birth to the Security-Enhanced Linux project back in 2000. SE Linux is a collection of Linux kernel security modules and other tools that provide a flexible mechanism for restricting what resources users or applications can access.