A security analyst (and a Black Hat USA speaker this year) created a phony profile (Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn) on the internet and proceeded to social-engineered as many poor victims to accept “her” as a friend. The project ran for a month and it was completely published for research purposes only.
Among its many victims were
She scored connections with people in the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the CIO of the NSA, an intelligence director for the U.S. Marines, a chief of staff for the U.S. House of Representatives, and several Pentagon and DoD employees. The profiles also attracted defense contractors, such as Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, and Booz Allen Hamilton.
If that’s not impressive enough, I don’t know what is.
Well after a month-long void, I apologize with no posts. It’s been a crazy month with new job AND new home. But glad to know everything’s going well now. Just need to tie a few loose ends
Several articles I found interesting the late few days (no Kotaku/Facebook from work )
The biggest stir-up in the crypto community! US’ newly founded Cyber Command has a new logo, and it has crypted code on it! And according to Wired magazine they’re actually challenging people to solve it. The only hint? It’s their mission statement. Wired Article – Cyber Command Code
The last isn’t really techno, I know, but it’s interesting what you can find in the Internet isn’t it? A comprehensive list of what is *assumed* to be the cause and/or prevention of cancer: Kill or Cure?
Oh wow, it’s been awhile! lol… sorry, but I was off for vacation for abit
Here’s a warmup of my return to the blog. Facebook’s email notification is sending the user’s IP address in it. Meaning, if somebody commented on your status and you get a notification email, that email will have the IP address of that person.
In summary, from the email, open the header source file and look for the x-facebook line. Copy and paste that line to an email tracer (such as this) and it can track the IP.
So much for privacy, Facebook…………
ps: Speaking of Facebook trend, here’s an interesting article on Wired: Facebook’s Gone Rogue
Text stuff of the day (and quite a few interesting ones at that) are as follows, ladies and gentlemen…
Victorinox apparently just announced that they will be launching a hacking event of hacking their latest device… an encrypted USB key in a Victorinox army knife – the Victorinox Secure Penknife. The winner will win £100,000 if they manage to crack it, and still get a free penknife if they failed anyway. The contest, unfortunately, will be limited to 24 very lucky people, but anyone is free to apply.
The penknife itself is a mixture of the true-and-told tough (and original!) Swiss Army knife, but also embed an encrypted and secure USB drive, that will require a fingerprint scan to open – which, if you failed to provide the correct fingerprint, will automatically notify the owner by email. Which, by the way, should the owner never replies back to it, will cause the deletion of the file within the drive. Never mind the contest, tell me where can I buy that thing!
Samsung Swipe – On other news, Samsung released an update to their Swipe-system for their mobile. For the unknown, this is a program that enables you to swipe around a touchscreen to type in your cellphone. But for more clarification, please feel free to watch the video of the device breaking a new world-record in the fastest text-message typing.
Real Science on Mass Effect 2. Last but certainly not least. Do you play Mass Effect 2? Do you also enjoy watching Discovery channel? Ever wondered how thin it is the separation between real science and science fiction in the game?
Well, Dr. Michio Kaku – a real nerdy (hey he pulls references to Star Trek and Star Wars, ok?) physicist who are also damn good at explaining complicated things into not-so-complicated brains – took a shot at explaining all of those. This is a seriously awesome short interview video if you’re into this stuff. Myself, for example,could not pause or stop watching this video mid-way at any point (except when the other dude is talking)
So ASUS just released the news on their latest 1366 board (that’s for i7 CPUs, while i5/i3/few i7 are on 1156), and it has one of the nicest heatsink design I’ve ever seen.
Of course, it goes way (way!) beyond a fancy colour theme. It has 4 PCI-Express slots (so… a Crossfire’s Crossfire? or 3-SLI plus a PhysX card? LOL), X58 chipsets (enough PCI-X lane to accomodate multi-multi-graphic adapters), 6 triple-channel RAM slots, USB 3.0 slots (brand new and way faster than the current USB 2.0), 7 4-pin fan connectors, and ability to remotely control your board on the hardware level (overclocking through BIOS, fan speed, monitor temps, power on-off, etc.) through another computer (network) or (if that’s not cool enough for you)… Bluetooth.
Yup. That pretty much means you can overclock your PC from your smartphone. Insane.
After testing a few more AV at work, I decided to share some of my results. The following are 2 brand of antivirus I’ve rarely heard, which both handily handed AVG-Free’s butt in a silver platter; ie. it scans more thoroughly and removes more effectivesly.
Avira Anti-Virus
Free version is very robust. Paid version has numerous version, tailored neatly to your requirements. Fileserver? Mailserver? even Proxyserver-specific AV? No problem. Decent price too.
MalwareBytes
Ok, so not exactly an anti-virus, but an anti-malware. Yes, there is a small difference (Microsoft Security Essential is an anti-malware). Though for most home users, the difference shouldn’t be obvious, and either would work fine.
Malware Bytes is a small company, and the free version doesn’t have real-time scanning, but at what it does – removing nasty high-level malwares – it does it extremely well. Not to mention speedy scanning time.
That’s all for now, but I’ll probably update this list more later in the future.
Update: Avast Antivirus
This one is pretty nifty to block and maintain a healthy system. I’ve used the business version back then and it was very comprehensive and customizable, yet not exactly towards the lite end of the resource meter.
Their free version however, are quite capable of cleaning and securing most home users.
In order to pay some homage to my original Computer Engineering background, I have to share this great article by ArsTechnica on how robots think – Ars Technica article
While taking an example on DARPA mobile robots (which further relates personally to me as my final project in college was a robo-mouse), the article evolve on the nitty gritty detail on sensory input processing and its relation to the reaction. It also dwelve deeper into the logic algorithm of decision making process (probabilities and chance elimination formulas) as well as decision-action processing (that is, what exactly and how does one executes one’s decision); spiced with a little of marginal error correction logic.
I guess what intrigues me most is relating how a visual and other sensory inputs are treated by an artificial intelligence, with human reaction to similar inputs. Felt like we’re so close to inventing an AI as advanced as the soul, yet so far. Charming, really.
So in the follow-up of their highly succesfull OS (Win7 did pass with flying colours no matter which OS you’re coming from – at least according to the sales record), Microsoft decided to throw in a mobile OS as well. Updating their fairly infamous (in a negative way) WinMobile6 series (6.5 and 6.1 seems to be the most common used on smartphones) one version higher.
But with all the hype of iPhone, Android, and their manufacturer adopters, can Microsoft really (yet again) land a big, warm, and fluffy surprise?
The link above entails a few pictures and a very impressive video on a sample smartphone running WinMo7. But the biggest news is? WinPhone Marketplace. If you have an iPhone, think of this as iTunes. Yes, that’s right. This is where future WinMo7 users will be downloading user-developed applications, games, musics, and whatnots.
Only time will tell how succesful the Marketplace can be, but trust me, it will be the make-it-or-break-it point for WinMo7. Afterall, such is the case for the iPhone.
Oh yes, that is a Netflix application.
Update March 16th, 2010:
Of course, who am I kidding? After reading a little more into another WinMo7 article focused on its Enterprise functionalities, it’s obvious even the latest incarnation of Windows Mobile can’t compete to the professional requirements of an enterprise – leaving that (rather large) consumer market wedge (still) dominated by the Blackberry family.
Of course, that being said, there are still people who uses Blackberries yet never touch the email nor BBM functions…