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Posts Tagged ‘Hacks’

Gawker to Add Stronger User Authentication to Thwart Future Hacks

Gawker Medias CTO Tom Plunkett outlined new methods for securing Gawker sites, such as moving to single-sign-on mechanisms and implementing disposable accounts, even though experts say these moves arent perfect solutions. – Gawkers family of Websites will integrate third-party
account verification systems into its commenting system to defend against
future database attacks, Gawker Media CTO Tom Plunkett wrote in an e-mail memo
to the staff.
In the memo, which was also posted on Jim Romeneskos
Poynter blog, Plunket…


Malware, Hacks and Leaks: The Top 10 Security Stories of 2010

The last 12 months have offered a cornucopia of cyber-security stories. During 2010, there was no lack of data breaches, hacks and malware attacks. There were tales of international cyber-espionage and warfare in such far-flung places as China and Iraq, U.S secrets spilling onto the Internet thanks to the controversial site WikiLeaks& which found itself under attack as it prepared to release thousands of documents& and leaked e-mails. But it wasn’t just the bad guys who were busy. As usual, law enforcement and security researchers were active as well, and the year saw botnet takedowns and arrests as attackers and the people who hunt them crisscrossed the globe. Beyond that were acquisitions, some of which& like Intel’s $7.68 billion purchase of McAfee& reverberated throughout the security industry. And it didn’t stop there. Security issues related to topics such as cloud computing generated high levels of interest as well. In addition, both Facebook and Google& collectors of vast amounts of customer data& were the target of criticism revolving around privacy issues. So without further ado and in no particular order, here’s a look back at the top security stories of the 2010, with the hope that there will be no major attacks between now and Jan. 1. – …


Top Hacks, Breaches and Compromises of 2010 (So Far)

This has been a busy year for both hackers and computer forensic specialists. Whether it was the 4 million usernames and e-mail addresses swiped in a hack of The Pirate Bay or AT&T’s Website hack that exposed the e-mail addresses of iPad 3G owners, the first six months of 2010 are a reminder of the realities of today’s IT security landscape. With this backdrop, security professionals will meet the week of July 26 at the Black Hat security conference in Las Vegas to discuss the latest threats and what can be done about them. While each of the most serious hacks and malicious breaches are different, many have a key similarity – insecure code. Others highlight the dangers of phishing and criminals exploiting potential gaps in physical security. Here are some of the more notable data breaches, hacks and exposures that made the news so far this year. – …


April 1, 1998: Disney to Buy MIT for $6.9 Billion

1998: Massachusetts Institute of Technology students, long known for their school pranks, hack the school’s home page to announce to the world that the Walt Disney Co. would purchase MIT for $6.9 billion.
The prestigious school would be renamed the Disney Institute of Technology, according to an April Fools’ Day press release linked to the bogus [...]

Kitchen Hack: One-Minute Bread


Oven-fresh bread is one of life’s simple joys. Ciabatta, a crisp-crusted Italian bread with hints of sourdough and loads of crannies longing for butter, is one of the easiest breads to make at home.

Why are we talking about baking bread on Lifehack? Because kitchen hacks aren’t just impressive, they often have very tasty results! In this instance, I’m going to show you how to make ciabatta with less than one minute of prep time. How is that possible? Like many great hacks, this one uses simple ingredients and as few steps as possible to get the job done.

You may have heard of “no-knead” bread before. Mark Bittman and many others have promoted their versions of an artisan bread that doesn’t require any heavy labor. While those recipes also create delicious results, they involve too many steps to be considered a real hack.

I wanted something very, very simple that delivered great results in 60 seconds of prep time or less. It may take you a few tries to get below the one-minute mark, but I think you’ll enjoy the results every time!

For your ciabatta you’ll need:

  • 4 cups of all-purpose flour (do NOT pack the flour into the measuring cup)
  • 2 cups of warm water
  • 1 teaspoon of salt
  • 1/4 teaspoon of granulated yeast (or equivalent)

For the gorgeous readers needing metric equivalents of this recipe, Toon left a comment with the following conversion:

  • 500 grams of all-purpose flour
  • 4,7 deciliter of warm water
  • 4 grams of salt (= 1 teaspoon = 5 ml)
  • 1 gram of dry yeast (= 1/4 teaspoon = 1,25 ml)

You’ll also need a medium-size mixing bowl, a 10×15 cookie sheet or baking stone, a hand towel or plastic wrap, and whatever you’d like to keep your bread from sticking (if you’re using a pan, I use flour and corn meal).

Have everything handy? Good. Let’s do this!

1. Mix Water & Yeast

Pour the warm water into the medium-size mixing bowl and stir in the yeast with a spoon. No need to be particular, just dump and slosh.

2. Add Flour And Salt

Add flour and salt to your bowl of yeasty water. This, after measuring out the flour, presents another prime opportunity to get flour on your person. This will be regarded by many as a sign of your culinary determination. You’ll need such signs because anybody who actually watches you make the bread will think you’re one of the laziest bakers in existence.

3. Stir Into A Heavy Batter

Use a spoon. You could use your hands if you wanted but you probably didn’t wash your hands before starting this anyhow. Start with a quick run about around the perimeter of the bowl with your spoon. A few quick strokes through the middle and you should have a heavy batter. If it looks too thick to be pancake batter and not thick enough to be playdough, you’re right on target.

4. Set It And Nearly Forget It

Cover your project with a hand towel or plastic wrap and set in a safe place for a few hours. After the dough has rested for 8 to 12 hours, it will have nearly doubled in size. (If you add a bit of sugar at the start and you’re in a hurry, you can rush this process but I don’t recommend it for your first try.)

5. Preheat Oven & Prepare Your Pan

There’s a lot of room for variation at this stage. The goal is to place the dough onto a surface that will keep it from falling through the oven rack and not stick on. I use an old cookie sheet sprinkled with flour and corn meal. You can use a buttered pan, pizza stone, or baking paper. It’s up to you. The flour/cornmeal method takes only a few seconds.

Before you start prepping your pan/stone, set your oven to 400F. (For those of you using wood stoves, don’t stress the particulars. Pull a few cedar shingles off the back porch roof and get that fire burning hot!)

6. Pour Out The Batter

This is the fun part! Uncover the bowl of dough and slowly pour it out onto the pan you just prepared for it. You’ll want to use a spoon to guide the dough into place and get the last bits out of the bowl. The dough will be very wet and sticky. That’s okay! Get the dough out onto the pan and if you’re lucky, it’ll look something like this:

7. Add Spices (If Needed) & Place Bread Into 400F Oven

If you’re trying to stay within the one-minute prep, you probably won’t have time to sprinkle some of your favorite herbs onto your ciabatta before baking. If you’re not worried about time, some dried oregano, basil, and rosemary make a nice addition.

8. Remove Your Ciabatta From The Oven

Check on your ciabatta after about 25 minutes. Once it’s golden brown on top and looks good to eat, take it out of the oven and set it aside to cool for at least 10 minutes. You can cut into it immediately but if you do it’ll collapse and won’t look as pretty.

Wait! You really thought I wanted you to take a hot pan out of a 400F oven without some sort of protection? Craziness! If you don’t have an oven mitt handy, take off your shirt, fold it so there will be at least 6 layers of cloth protecting your hand, remove the pan from the oven and place in a safe spot to cool.

9. Slice & Enjoy

Move your ciabatta off the pan or baking stone and onto a proper cutting board for demolition and devouring. Ciabatta is famous as a sandwich bread but, like most breads, it’s absolutely delicious right out of the oven.

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Researcher Hacks Twittter Using SSL Vulnerability

A security researcher demonstrates how an SSL renegotiation vulnerability made public earlier in November could be exploited to steal Twitter log-in credentials.
– A security researcher has demonstrated how attackers could
use a newly discovered vulnerability in the Secure Sockets Layer protocol to
launch an attack on Twitter.
The researcher, Anil Kurmus, posted details of the attack to
his blog,
The Secure Goose, Nov. 10. The exploit takes advantage of a…


Gonzalez Pleads Guilty to Massive Retail Hacks

The hacker who help mastermind cracking into the networks of TJX Companies, BJs Wholesale Club, OfficeMax, Boston Market, Barnes Noble and Sports Authority faces a minimum of 15 years and a maximum of 25 years in prison. The hacks netted more than 40 million credit and debit card numbers.
– Albert
Gonzalez pleaded guilty Sept. 11 to hacking into the systems of major U.S.
retailers including TJX Companies, BJs Wholesale Club, OfficeMax,
Boston Market, Barnes amp; Noble and Sports Authority. More than 40
million credit and debit card numbers were stolen as a result of the hacking ac…


Wiedeking supports crumbling hacks

I sometimes wonder if there is something in the Volkswagen-Porsche politics that we don’t know about. Family feud things that are perhaps a little dark and not in the public domain. I will just say this: you wouldn’t want to spill Ferdinand Piech’s tea over him, would you?


There was a Porsche press release that went out recently when CEO Wendelin Wiedeking fell on his sword that caught my eye.


Now, Porsche releases, when translated into English, tend to come across as a bit dull or just odd. I know not why, that’s just how they always seem. I am not necessarily knocking that – I wouldn’t do a remotely acceptable job of writing something in German. And the lack of PR slickness in the typical Porsche press release actually has a certain charm.


Anyway, Wiedeking – shoved fairly firmly in the back by Ferdy – bows out and gets a golden goodbye. Porsche sticks out a release letting it be known that Wiedeking is a bit altruistic, does good works. Fair enough. If you earn EUR80m a year, that’s a lot of dough to play with and you perhaps don’t want to appear greedy. Wiedeking, I know, is involved with various foundations – all good and laudable stuff.


This is an official statement from Mr Wiedeking in the Porsche release to which I refer. May I simply draw your attention to the bit about elderly and suffering journalists. To say the least, not many – openly – take pity on us, as a profession:


Personal reasons but also my responsibility towards society have led to my decision to donate a material amount of money for social purposes.


As a sign of my outstanding relation with longterm members of staff and companions I aim to establish a charitable organisation in Stuttgart-Zuffenhausen where the headquarter of Porsche AG is located. With the support of the Porsche union representatives the trust shall be equipped with liquid funds of Euros 25 million and supports/aim at ensuring a socially fair development at all Porsche sites.


Furthermore I will donate to the social fund of Landespresse Baden-Württemberg e.V., the trust of Hamburger Presse and the society of the Verein Kollegenhilfe niedersächsischer Journalisten e.V. a lump sum of euros 500.000 each. According to the goals of the organisations outlined in their respective articles of association the donations should serve as a support for elderly and suffering journalists.


Over and above this I will invest in projects, targeting at creating jobs in Germany. I do pay my taxes in Germany with roughly half of my income being transferred to the state.


The foundation in Zuffenhausen shall complement my two existing charitable trusts in Beckum/Westfalia and Bietigheim-Bissingen, together equipped with a cash donation of Euros ten million.


Thank you and goodbye. Regrets, I have a few, but way too few to mention. Let me please take this opportunity to talk publicly to a much loved and respected comrade. Ferdy, I respect you, of course, but let’s give each other some space. I always told you the Cayenne was ugly, but that Americans would buy it. I am sorry to have created such unbelievable shareholder value from a wreck. How terrible of me. Please also say sorry to those banker guys who seemed a little uptight yesterday. I gave them your number. Oh, and can you please stop singing that old Sister Sledge tune under your breath in SB meetings? No-one finds it funny any more. Ciao! Now, where is that Sunseekers catalogue…[this para clearly not his, but added by an elderly and suffering journalist, with a slightly warped sense of humour] 

RESULTS PREVIEW: VW rides the recession

Indian hacks RAAF website over student attacks in Australia

An Indian hacker broke into the Royal Australian Air Force website and defaced it with a threatening message aimed at the Australian Government, the Sydney Morning Herald reports.
The Department of Defence confirmed that the hack took place between Monday and Tuesday, forcing it to pull the entire RAAF website offline and replace it with a [...]

Ultrasn0w to get iPhone 3GS unlock thanks to old hack

Thanks to an unaddressed security flaw, the iPhone Dev Team have announced that they will soon update their ultrasn0w unlocking tool to work on the iPhone 3GS.  The exploit, known as 24Kpwn, was first discovered in the iPod touch 2G, and used in the redsn0w tool to jailbreak that PMP.

Now, the Dev Team can use [...]