Stuxnet: Anatomy of a Computer Virus on Vimeo. URBAN HACK ATTACK - EPISODE 1. Technology - How to Make Instructables. 56 46 25 146 3259 15315 24453 91.3K 3126 4190 108 121.2K 311.3K 652.0K 25686 22703 21912K 26583 291.1K 918.7K 18664 4199 28862 261.2K 411.9K 151.0K 642.2K 501.2K 1073.1K 5314 19823K 11796 761.7K 12800 34689 16503 591.5K 9882 19584 7429 381.3K 31894 381.1K 312.0K 19588 7532 311.3K 26829 21727 271.0K 191.8K 14624 33876 601.1K 321.3K 884.1K 401.7K 20962.
URBAN HACK ATTACK - EPISODE 1. One-Fourth Of SSL Websites At Risk - Darkreading. Phone hacking. Google Hacking Database, GHDB, Google Dorks. Windows IPv4 Networks Vulnerable To IPv6 Attack -- InformationWeek. A man-in-the-middle attack can use the IPv6 protocol to eavesdrop on IPv4 networks, though an attacker would have to physically place a router in the targeted environment for it to work. (click image for larger view) Slideshow: 10 Massive Security Breaches Users of Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4) networks, beware man-in-the-middle attacks.
That's because such networks can be exploited using capabilities built into IPv6, the next-generation standard for expanding the number of addresses for Internet-connected devices. In particular, someone with malicious intent could "impose a parasitic IPv6 overlay network on top of an IPv4-only network, so that an attacker can carry out man-in-the-middle attacks on IPv4 traffic," said Alec Waters, a security researcher for InfoSec Institute, in a blog post. The attack works by introducing an IPv6 router into an IPv4 network, but only connecting the router to the IPv4 Internet. But is this a vulnerability or a feature? More Insights. How to open God Mode on Windows 7 & Vista.
Founder's Blog - Jitbit: Chinese Magical Hard-Drive. This is Founder's blog - Subscribe - About Apr 7 2011 A Russian friend of mine has posted this absolutely amazing story. He works at a hard-drive repair center in a Russian town right next to the Chinese border. A couple of days ago a customer has brought a broken 500Gb USB-drive that he had bought in a Chinese store across the river, for an insanely low price. But the drive was not working: if you, say, save a movie onto the drive, playing the saved movie back resulted in replaying just the last 5 minutes of the film.
The whole service center was rolling on the floor laughing. It's a 128-MB flash-drive. The device looks pretty convincing - lots of tech labels and stuff...