Tag Archives: hack

How To Hack Twitter’s Two-Factor Authentication

An anonymous reader writes with this excerpt from PC Mag’s SecurityWatch: “We’ve pointed out some problems with Twitter’s new two-factor authentication. For example, since just one phone number can be associated with an account, Twitter’s two-factor authentication won’t work for organizations like the Associated Press, The Onion, or The Guardian. They were hacked; they could still be hacked again in the same way. However, security experts indicate that the problem is worse than that, a lot worse.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.




Slashdot

Raspberry Pi Camera Module Now On Sale, $25 To Add An Eye To Pi Hardware Hack Projects

Raspberry Pi plus camera modelCalling all hardware hackers: the Raspberry Pi camera module has gone on sale online via Pi suppliers including RS Components and Premier Farnell/Element14, providing the eye required for all those computer vision projects you had in mind for Pi. The module actually went on sale yesterday and is currently temporarily out of stock on RS’ website. The module costs between £17 & £19 or around $ 25.
TechCrunch

Treading Carefully, Google Encourages Developers to Hack Glass

Breaking its own restrictions, Google will show developers how to build any kind of app for Google Glass.

Google has set plenty of restrictions on the functionality of apps for Glass, the head-mounted display it is now shipping out to early adopters. At the company’s annual developer conference, I/O, which kicks off today, it will show app creators how to break those rules.







New on MIT Technology Review

Kinectasploit: Hack Tools Meet Kinect

mask.of.sanity writes “While Hollywood often fails to portray hacking, one researcher has made the art of exploitation look more like the big screen. Kinectasploit is hacking in the form of a first-person shooter that melds Microsoft’s Kinect controls with 20 hacking tools including Metasploit, Snort, Nessus, John the Ripper and Ettercap. The work in progress can be downloaded from github.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.




Slashdot

People Are Speaking, Markets Are Reacting, Fears Are Falling And Hackers Are Gonna Hack!

hackersEditor’s note: Howard Lindzon is co-founder and CEO of StockTwits, a social network for traders and investors to share real-time ideas and information.

The markets are not changing so much as the technology that makes markets move. The technology has enabled machines to ping each other at speeds that give them an edge over humans (at least in the very short-term) and people are connected to other machines and people in ways that can’t be quantified. The social web and the leverage from these connections have the media confused, and it seems angry, if not completely wrong.
TechCrunch

Squirrel Evernote Hack Creates A Personalised Newsletter From The Cool Stuff You’ve Saved To Read Later

squirrelAnother simple but neat Evernote hack that came out of the 24-hour Disrupt NY Hackathon earlier today was Squirrel. Created by coder duo Zainab Ebrahimi and Jabari Bell, the hack turns articles Evernote readers have saved for reading later into a personalised newsletter. So, unlike the average email newsletter, Squirrel is populated with content the user actually wants to read.
TechCrunch

After hack, LivingSocial tells 50M users to reset passwords

More than 50 million users of the daily deals site LivingSocial are being asked to reset their passwords after hackers attacked the company's servers and potentially made off with personal data.
Computerworld News

Vulnerable terminal servers could let bad guys hack stoplights, gas pumps

Thousands of older systems, including those used to manage traffic lights, fuel pumps, point-of-sale terminals and building automation can be tampered with because they’re insecurely connected to the Internet.
Computerworld News

AP Twitter hack prompts fresh look at cybersecurity needs

Getting hacked on Twitter is fast becoming a rite of passage for big corporations, but Tuesday's attack on the Associated Press could be a tipping point and shows that social networks must do more to keep their users safe, security experts said.
Computerworld News

Syrian Electronic Army claims credit for CBS Twitter accounts hack

Yesterday, several of CBS’s Twitter accounts were hacked, including its main account, and its accounts for 60 Minutes, 48 Hours, and CBS Denver. The hackers got into the account and tweeted a series of things relating to President Obama and the United States being in cahoots with Al-Qaeda. The tweets also had links that led

Read The Full Story
SlashGear

Researchers Hack Over a Dozen Home Routers

An anonymous reader writes “Security researchers at Independent Security Evaluators have published a report demonstrating that a slew of home and small office (SOHO) routers are vulnerable to previously undisclosed vulnerabilities. The report asserts that at least thirteen popular routers can be compromised by a remote attacker, and a number of them do not require knowledge of credentials or active management sessions. Some of the routers are not listed as they work with vendors to fix them, but there are 17 vulnerabilities disclosed, with another 21 pending release. An article on CNET includes an interview with some of the researchers.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.




Slashdot

The War Z Taken Offline Following Hack

An anonymous reader writes with this tidbit from Net Security: “Players of The War Z, a first-person zombie survival game, have been notified of a breach of the developer’s forum and game databases and the theft of user data contained in them. ‘The data accessed included email addresses used to log-in to the forum, forum passwords which we encrypt, email addresses used to log-in to the game, encrypted game passwords as well as in-game character names and the IP addresses from which players log-in to the forum and to the game,’ the developer explained …There is no mention of what encryption algorithm they use to encrypt the passwords, nor whether they are ‘salted,’ so their advice to users about immediately changing the passwords they used for the forum and the account is more than fitting.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.




Slashdot

Apple ID accounts reportedly vulnerable to password reset hack, forgot password page taken offline for maintenance (update 2: back)

Apple ID accounts reportedly vulnerable to password reset hack, forgot password page taken offline for maintenance

Gaping security holes are a pretty terrifying thing, especially when they involve something as sensitive as your Apple ID. Sadly it seems that immediately after making the paranoid happy by instituting two-step authentication a pretty massive flaw in Cupertino’s system was discovered and first reported by The Verge. Turns out you can reset any Apple ID password with nothing more than a person’s email address and date of birth — two pieces of information that are pretty easy to come across.

There’s a little more to the hack, but it’s simple enough that even your non-tech savvy aunt or uncle could do it. After entering the target email address in the password reset form you can then select to answer security questions to validate your identity. The first task will be to enter a date of birth. If you enter that correctly then paste a particular URL into the address bar (which we will not be publishing for obvious reasons), press enter, then — voilà — instant password reset! Or, at least that’s the story. While we were attempting to verify these claims Apple took down the password reset page for “maintenance.” Though we’ve received no official confirmation from Apple, it seems the company is moving swiftly to shut down this particularly troublesome workaround before word of it spreads too far.

Update: We’ve heard back from Apple on the matter, which stated, “Apple takes customer privacy very seriously. We are aware of this issue, and working on a fix.” No real surprises that a fix is in the works, but there you have it from the horse’s mouth.

Update 2: The forgotten password page is back as of late Friday evening — that was (relatively) quick.

Filed under: ,

Comments

Source: The Verge

Engadget RSS Feed

CCTV Hack Takes Casino For $33 Million

iComp writes “A sophisticated scheme to use a casino’s own security systems against it has netted scammers $ 33 million in a high-stakes poker game after they were able to gain a crucial advantage by seeing the opposition’s cards. The team used a high-rolling accomplice from overseas who was known to spend large amounts while gambling at Australia’s biggest casino, the Crown in Melbourne, according to the Herald Sun. He and his family checked into the Crown and were accommodated in one of its $ 30,000-a-night villas. The player then joined a private high-stakes poker game in a private suite. At the same time, an unnamed person got access to the casino’s CCTV systems in the poker room and fed the information he gleaned back to the player via a wireless link. Over the course of eight hands the team fleeced the opposition to the tune of $ 33 million.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.




Slashdot

Legend of Zelda hack makes Link the damsel in distress

Inspired by the father who modded Donkey Kong so his daughter could play the Princess, another person had the idea of modifying another classic Nintendo game. Kenna W has always loved The Legend of Zelda series, and she always wanted to play the game as Princess Zelda instead of the male protagonist, Link. She wished

Read The Full Story
SlashGear

Former Tribune staffer accused of conspiring in Anonymous hack

A former Tribune Company employee could face as much as 10 years of jail time over federal charges accusing him of conspiring with members of the hacker group Anonymous to hack into a Tribune website.
Computerworld News

Simple wallet hack uses magnetic alarms to stave off pickpockets

Simple wallet hack uses magnetic alarm to stave off pickpockets

We just wrapped up our tour of duty at MWC dodging the notorious pickpockets in Barcelona, so perhaps that’s why we’re particularly intrigued by Cabel Kraft’s anti-snatch wallet hack over at Hackaday. Most billfold alarms rely on a light trigger, which can be problematic if the thief squirrels away his prize for a later reveal. Kraft solves that issue by using magnetic alarms — the sort attached to windows for break-in alerts — that set off when the wallet is removed from the victim’s pocket. He did have to remove a lot of the alarm’s bulk and alter the location of the reed switch, but the setup seems otherwise uncomplicated. If you’d like to prevent your wallet from getting picked and have some soldering chops to boot, have a peek at Kraft’s handiwork at the source or just view the video after the break.

Filed under:

Comments

Source: Hackaday

Engadget RSS Feed

Evernote plans two-factor authentication following last week’s hack

Evernote plans twofactor authentication following last week's hack and password reset

In a move that’s often more reactive than proactive these days, Evernote has shared plans to add two-factor authentication to its login process. This latest announcement follows last week’s hacking attack and subsequent site-wide password reset, and will be available to all of the site’s 50 million users beginning later this year, according to an InformationWeek report. It’s too early to say exactly how the Evernote team plans to implement the new security feature, whether through a dedicated app or text message password, but given the service’s scale, we can likely count out a hardware fob option, at least. For now, your best course of action is to create a secure password, or, if you’re especially paranoid, you may consider delaying your return until the security boost is in place.

Filed under:

Comments

Source: InformationWeek

Engadget RSS Feed

Dropbox users getting spammed, might be from earlier hack

The file sharing site’s user forum is filling with complaints of email spam, the company believes it could be related to last year’s data leak. [Read more]


CNET News

Which Four Countries Most Actively Hack the U.S.?

An expert says U.S. intelligence believe four countries actively attack U.S. computers. But aside from China and Russia, who’s on the list?

As we and others have reported for years now, China is often accused of infiltrating the computer networks of U.S. companies and government departments. At the RSA security conference in San Francisco this week, one expert said that U.S. officials consider China just the most prolific on a shortlist of four countries most actively probing U.S. assets over the Internet.







New on MIT Technology Review

Bit9 Says 32 Malicious Programs Whitelisted In Recent Hack

chicksdaddy writes “The security firm Bit9 released a more detailed analysis of the hack of its corporate network was part of a larger operation that was aimed a firms in a ‘very narrow market space’ and intended to gather information from the firms. The analysis, posted on Monday on Bit9′s blog is the most detailed to date of a hack that was first reported on February 8 by the blog Krebsonsecurity.com, but that began in July, 2012. In the analysis, by Bit9 Chief Technology Officer Harry Sverdlove said 32 separate malware files and malicious scripts were whitelisted in the hack. Bit9 declined to name the three customers affected by the breach, or the industry segment that was targeted, but denied that it was a government agency or a provider of critical infrastructure such as energy, utilities or banking. The small list of targets — just three — and the fact that one malware program was communicating with a system involved in a recent ‘sinkholing operation’ raises the specter that the hack of Bit9 may have played a part in the recent attacks on Facebook, Twitter and Apple, though Bit9 declined to name the firms or the market they serve.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.




Slashdot

Microsoft confirms hack attack mirroring recent Facebook break-in

Microsoft has joined the list of prominent technology companies confirming they have been hit by a recent computer hacking attack.


FOX News

Zendesk hack snares user data from Twitter, Tumblr, Pinterest

Some information for users of the social networks was captured when hackers attacked the customer support service. [Read more]


CNET News

Jawbone warns of ‘limited’ MyTalk hack, disables old passwords

The company says that the attack was limited to a person’s name, e-mail address, and the encrypted version of passwords. [Read more]


CNET News

Twitter hack may have targeted elected officials, journalists

Accounts linked to influential media outlets, as well as the key members of the federal government, among accounts likely hacked last week, according to an analysis. [Read more]


CNET News

Glasses That Hack Around Colorblindness

MatthewVD writes “In 2006, researcher Mark Changizi came up with a novel theory for why humans evolved with color vision: to detect social cues and emotions in others. He built glasses called 02Amps to enhance perception of blood pooling. Some hospitals have tried using the glasses to see bruising that’s not visible unaided, or help nurses find veins. But it turns out now that the glasses might be able to fix some forms of colorblindness, too.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.




Slashdot

Chinese Hack New York Times

Rick Zeman writes “According to a headline article in the New York Times, they admit to being hacked by the Chinese, and covers the efforts of Mandiant to investigate, and then to eradicate their custom Advanced Persistent Threats (APT). This was alleged to be in reaction to an article which details the sleazy business dealings of the family of Wen Jiabao, China’s newest Prime Minister. China’s Ministry of National Defense said in denial, ‘Chinese laws prohibit any action including hacking that damages Internet security.’”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.




Slashdot

HTC HD2 Windows RT hack brings metro apps to WVGA

One of the most-hacked smartphones in the history of the mobile universe, the HTC HD2, is continuing to get its guts spun as Windows RT (tablet Windows 8) gets pushed to it with full-screen metro-style apps! This hack is a continuation of a project being run by @CotullaCode as mentioned a few weeks ago right

Read The Full Story
SlashGear

Sony Fined In UK For PlayStation Network Hack

Sockatume writes “The UK’s information protection authority, the ICO, has fined Sony for failing to adequately secure the information of PlayStation Network users. The investigation was triggered by a 2011 security breach, during which personally identifying information (including password hashes) was recovered from a Sony database where it had been stored without encryption. In the ICO’s view Sony’s security measures were inadequate, and the attack could have been prevented. The £250,000 (ca. $ 400,000) fine, the largest the ICO has ever imposed, is equivalent to a few pennies per affected user. Sony disagrees with the ICO’s decision and intends to appeal.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.




Slashdot

iPad Hack Statement Of Responsibility

Andrew AuernheimerEditor’s note: Andrew Auernheimer, also known by his pseudonym weev, is an American grey hat hacker and self-described Internet troll. Follow him on Twitter @rabite.

In June of 2010 there was an AT&T webserver on the open Internet. There was an API on this server, a URL with a number at the end. If you incremented this number, you saw the next iPad 3G user email address. I thought it was egregiously negligent for AT&T to be publishing a complete target list of iPad 3G owners, and I took a sample of the API output to a journalist at Gawker. I did this because I despised people I think are unjustly wealthy and wanted to embarass them. I thought this is the United States of America where we have the right to do basic arithmetic and query public webservers.
TechCrunch

Hack Design Teaches Design To Hackers, Has Already Signed Up Over 20K Developers

Screenshot_1_16_13_2_08_PMMost developers are famously not great designers, but some of the best products come from teams where developers know a bit about design and the designers know a bit about what the developers do. Hack Design wants to get developers up to speed with the basics of design by sending to developers a fresh and easy-to-follow lesson about design. There is clearly a need for this kind of project and Hack Design has already signed up over 20,000 developers just a few days after soft launching on Hacker News.
TechCrunch

Australian Spy Agency Seeks Permission To Hack Third-Party Computers

New submitter LordLucless writes “ASIO, Australia’s spy agency, is pushing for the ability to lawfully hijack peoples’ computers — even if they are not under suspicion of any crime. They seek the ability to gain access to a third party’s computer in order to facilitate gaining access to the real target — essentially using any person’s personal computer as a proxy for their hacking attempts. The current legislation prohibits any action by ASIO that, among other things, interferes with a person’s legitimate use of their computer. Conceivably, over-turning this restriction would give ASIO the ability to build their own bot-net of compromised machines. Perhaps inevitably, they say these changes are required to help them catch terrorists.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.




Slashdot

Hack gives HTC Droid DNA the bootloader unlock that Verizon took away

HTC Droid DNA review wrap-up

Custom ROM fans were briefly teased with the prospect of Verizon loosening its anti-modding stance when the HTC Droid DNA first arrived: in the pre-release days, the official HTCDev portal allowed unlocking the DNA’s bootloader. While the carrier unfortunately clamped down and denied the option by the time the giant smartphone was in stores, that hasn’t stopped Android Police and Sean Beaupre from keeping the dream alive through very unofficial means. A special backup file, a carrier ID generator app, a shell script and judicious use of ADB tweak the carrier information to trick HTCDev and let the unlock work once again. To call this a risky procedure would be an understatement, however — venturing past a certain point raises the real possibility of bricking the device, and HTC’s bootloader tool already puts limits on post-unlock support even when it’s blessed by carriers. Should the urge to liberate the Droid DNA overwhelm a sense of caution (or a wait for the Deluxe), you’ll find both the hack and unofficial help through the source links.

Filed under: , , ,

Comments

Source: Android Police

Engadget

Backed Or Whacked: An NFC Reader And Writer For iOS That Developers Can Hack

Backed or Whacked logoEditor’s note: Ross Rubin is principal analyst at Reticle Research and writer for Engadget.

No, the Flomio FloJack doesn’t track stolen boats with GPS. In the spirit of the Square credit card reader, the device plugs into the headphone jack of mobile iOS or legacy Android mobile devices to read and write data via NFC.
TechCrunch

Nexus 4 LTE enabled using simple hack

While it was discovered that Google’s latest Nexus 4 smartphone does, in fact, have an LTE chip on the inside, the phone’s radios don’t cover the wide deployment of most LTE bands, resulting in unhappy users who yearn for faster downloads while on the go. However, a simple tweak has been discovered that allows Canadian

Read The Full Story
SlashGear

BeatBots co-founder Marek Michalowski encourages the world to hack Keepon (video)

BeatBots cofounder Marek Michalowski encourages the world to hack Keepon video

When we visited BeatBots’ San Francisco headquarters a few days back, the company’s co-founder Marek Michalowski was a bit hush-hush when it came to discussing the future of Keepon, not saying much beyond alluding to upcoming updates for the move-busting little ‘bot. He was, however, more than happy to talk about hacking the beat-monitoring toy, something the company had in mind when it first designed the consumer-friendly toy. “We felt it was important to allow people to hack it and be able to do more things with the toy than it can do out of the box,” Michalowski told us.

The company left the toy’s 12C bus open, so interested parties can easily manipulate My Keepon by way of microcontrollers like Arduino and its ilk. We’ve already seen some crafty individuals get the robot to do their bidding, something that’s only likely to increase when Michalowski releases a guide for hacking My Keepon in the very near future. In the meantime, click through after the break to see the robotics PhD discuss Keepon hacks. A YouTube full of choreographed “Thriller” Keepon videos surely can’t be that far off.

Continue reading BeatBots co-founder Marek Michalowski encourages the world to hack Keepon (video)

Filed under:

BeatBots co-founder Marek Michalowski encourages the world to hack Keepon (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 19 Nov 2012 11:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments
Engadget

30 years later, it's an unimaginable hack

Even back in 1982, the astonishing emergence of a large black weather balloon from beneath the field during the annual Harvard-Yale football game was enough to have police officers drawing their guns.
Computerworld News

Detroit Hack City

photo-2Driving through downtown Detroit is like seeing a city after the Fall. The streets are empty, and there are entire buildings devoid of windows, let alone occupants. It’s the Rust Belt writ large, a reminder that we are not permanent.

TechCrunch

'Pinkie Pie' trips up Chrome, close to $60K at Hack in the Box

It appears the hacker known as "Pinkie Pie" produced the first Chrome vulnerability at the Hack In the Box conference on Wednesday, just ahead of the deadline for the competition this afternoon.
Computerworld News

Hack in the Box kicks off jam-packed security conference

Hack in the Box will host its 10th security conference this week in Kuala Lumpur featuring an all-star cast of hacking luminaries and a cutting-edge program.
Computerworld News

Washington confirms Chinese hack attack on White House computer

White House sources confirmed but downplayed an alarming report claiming that the U.S. government’s most sensitive computers — including systems used by the Military Office for nuclear commands — had been breached by Chinese hackers.




FOX News

Android remote data-wipe hack still exists: update your software now

If you’ve not heard of the recent discovery of some rather concerning data-wipe vulnerabilities with the Samsung Galaxy S III specifically, it’s time to read up – your phone could be hit as well. Developer / researcher Ravi Borgaonkar has found several devices of all kinds to be venerable to the less-than-pleasing way in which

Read The Full Story
SlashGear

Lingering Questions On the Extent of the Adobe Hack



chicksdaddy writes “In the wake of Adobe’s warning on Thursday about a high profile compromise on its network, security experts say the incident raises troubling questions about the extent of the breach at a company that makes software running on hundreds of millions of computers. Writing on Thursday, Brad Arkin, Adobe’s Senior Director of Product Security And Privacy, reassured customers that the company’s source code wasn’t stolen, nor did the hackers have access to code for any of Adobe’s core products like Adobe Reader or Flash. However, those with expertise in breaking into networks and cleaning up after hacks said the nature of the attack – which Adobe has described as having the characteristics of an ‘APT’ – or advanced persistent threat – make it difficult to know what attackers did or did not have access to and whether or not the threat has been removed. ‘If you put yourself in the hacker’s position you realize how much they must have known about Adobe internals to perform the hack they performed,’ said Dave Aitel of Immunity Inc. ‘If they had that kind of access it’s very hard to say that they were limited in their access and are completely removed from the network.’”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Slashdot

iOS 6 hack restores Google Maps

Canny developers have coaxed Google Maps into running on iOS 6 devices, bypassing the little-loved Apple Maps app, though the hack is said to be not yet ready for primetime. Apple replaced Google Maps on the iPhone 5 and other devices running iOS 6 with its own, homegrown Maps app, and promptly encountered criticism over the quality

Read The Full Story
SlashGear

Feds Add 9 Felony Charges Against Swartz For JSTOR Hack



Last year Aaron Swartz was indicted on four felony counts for allegedly stealing millions of academic journal articles from JSTOR. Today, Federal prosecutors piled on nine additional felony charges. The charges (PDF) are mostly covered under the 1984 Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, and are likely to test the legislation’s limits. According to Wired, “The indictment accuses Swartz of repeatedly spoofing the MAC address — an identifier that is usually static — of his computer after MIT blocked his computer based on that number. The grand jury indictment also notes that Swartz didn’t provide a real e-mail address when registering on the network. Swartz also allegedly snuck an Acer laptop bought just for the downloading into a closet at MIT in order to get a persistent connection to the network. Swartz allegedly hid his face from surveillance cameras by holding his bike helmet up to his face and looking through the ventilation holes when going in to swap out an external drive used to store the documents. Swartz also allegedly named his guest account ‘Gary Host,’ with the nickname ‘Ghost.’”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Slashdot

Two Romanians plead guilty in Subway hack

Two Romanian men have pleaded guilty to participating in a $ 10 million scheme to hack into the computers of hundreds of Subway restaurants in the U.S. and steal payment card data, the U.S. Department of Justice said.
Computerworld News

Hackathon Hardware Hackers: Here’s One More Chance To Hack On A Raspberry Pi This Weekened

Uncle SolderIf you are attending this weekend’s Hackathon – that is if you have tickets and are raring to go – I have some fun news. As we mentioned before, Makerbot will be in attendance with two of their 3D printers and I still have two Raspberry Pis courtesy of Adafruit Industries that will go to teams intent on building small hardware projects.

TechCrunch

Can snoopers hack your brain?

A computer scientist exploring whether brain wave-reading technology can covertly obtain the secret info we store in our heads has a shocker: The human brain is not immune to hackers.




FOXNews.com

Battle.net hack: how to keep yourself safe

Earlier today we received word that Blizzard’s battle.net servers have been hacked, and with a recent influx of 10 million users thanks to Diablo III‘s launch, that makes this potentially devastating for a lot of people. Blizzard has since released an FAQ on battle.net, telling users what exactly was compromised and what remains secure. Those

Read The Full Story
SlashGear

E-mail lists, encrypted passwords stolen in Battle.net hack

The company behind games such as World of Warcraft and Diablo tells customers it believes no financial information was accessed but suggests users change their passwords immediately.
[Read more]
CNET News