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Keyword: cybersecurity

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  • Report: Hacker Breaches ‘Lazy’ FBI Website Security

    01/06/2017 10:02:34 AM PST · by COUNTrecount · 5 replies
    Breitbart ^ | January 6, 2017 | Ben Kew
    A hacker claims to have breached the FBI’s official website for the second time, describing their security systems as “lazy.” The hacker, who goes by the name CyberZeist, reportedly breached the FBI’s website and posted some of the private information he obtained to the open source site Pastebin. FBI trying to patch-up their Plone CMS #0day at https://t.co/IRhqdQjNbp, too late!! #ComingSoon #NewYearsEve pic.twitter.com/u7KOXNO3qV — CyberZeist (@cyberzeist2) December 31, 2016 “This leak is totally devoted to the Anonymous Movement,” he wrote. CyberZeist reportedly exposed a vulnerability in the Plone Content Management System (CMS) of the FBI’s, reportedly penetrating the website’s systems...
  • No One Cared About Hacking until We found Out How Corrupt Liberals Are

    01/06/2017 6:43:15 AM PST · by KeyLargo · 16 replies
    Independent Sentinal ^ | Jan 6, 2017 | S. Noble
    No One Cared About Hacking until We found Out How Corrupt Liberals Are By S. Noble - January 6, 2017 US major government and military organizations are hacked all the time by endless numbers of foreign and domestic actors. Nothing was done to fix our cybersecurity. But let a privates organization like the DNC get hacked or careless John Podesta’s emails get hacked and all hell breaks loose. John Podesta left his smart phone in a cab, he fell for a phishing incident and his password was ‘passwØrd”. Hillary put our state secrets on a personal server she kept in...
  • Office Depot halts PC Health Checks amid bogus infection claims

    11/22/2016 7:40:46 AM PST · by snarkpup · 13 replies
    The Register ^ | 22 Nov 2016 at 01:46 | Iain Thomson
    Office Depot has suspended PC Health Check – its malware-scanning service – after it was accused of lying about infections to push antivirus software. Former Office Depot technician Shane Barnett told Seattle TV station KIRO 7 that the PC Health Check service would lie to customers that their otherwise-clean PCs were infected with malware, and that this was used to flog expensive disinfection tools. He claimed he was let go from his job because he refused to run the allegedly dodgy scanner on people's machines. ... The station decided to investigate his claims and took six virgin PCs along to...
  • [REDDIT] Breaking: Ceo With Ties To The CIA Makes A Direct Threat To Kill Donald Trump With A Sni

    11/13/2016 3:28:34 PM PST · by RummyChick · 133 replies
    REDDIT R/THE_DONALD ^ | 11/13 | REDDIT R/THE_DONALD
  • Senator Prods Federal Agencies on IoT Mess

    10/26/2016 7:21:23 AM PDT · by snarkpup · 1 replies
    Krebs on Security ^ | October 25th, 2016 at 1:21 pm | Brian Krebs
    The co-founder of the newly launched Senate Cybersecurity Caucus is pushing federal agencies for possible solutions and responses to the security threat from insecure “Internet of Things” (IoT) devices, such as the network of hacked security cameras and digital video recorders that were reportedly used to help bring about last Friday’s major Internet outages. ... I have been asked by several reporters over the past few days whether I think government has a role to play in fixing the IoT mess. Personally, I do not believe there has ever been a technology challenge that was best served by additional government...
  • Connected devices create millions of cyber security weak spots

    10/23/2016 4:42:29 PM PDT · by Tilted Irish Kilt · 21 replies
    financial times ^ | 10/23/16 | Hannah Kuchler
    Default passwords on devices from the digital video recorder in your living room to the security camera in your office threaten the stability of the internet, as hackers build vast networks of “Internet of Things” devices to bombard websites with traffic. The attack on Dyn, a domain name service provider, that disrupted access to high-profile sites such as Twitter, Spotify and the New York Times on Friday, highlighted the risks posed by the billions of devices connected to the internet with little or no cyber security protections. Unidentified hackers took over tens of millions of devices using malicious software called...
  • Today the web was broken by countless hacked devices – your 60-second guide

    10/21/2016 8:48:16 PM PDT · by snarkpup · 22 replies
    The Register ^ | 21 Oct 2016 at 21:45 | Chris Williams
    Updated Today, a huge army of hijacked internet-connected devices – from security cameras to home routers – turned on their owners and broke a big chunk of the internet. Compromised machines, following orders from as-yet unknown masterminds, threw huge amounts of junk traffic at servers operated by US-based Dyn, which provides DNS services for websites large and small. We're told gadgets behind tens of millions of IP addresses were press-ganged into shattering the internet – a lot of them running the Mirai malware, the source code to which is now public so anyone can wield it against targets. The result:...
  • Hacked Cameras, DVRs Powered Today’s Massive Internet Outage

    10/21/2016 3:13:03 PM PDT · by snarkpup · 44 replies
    Krebs on Security ^ | Oct. 16, 2016 | Brian Krebs
    A massive and sustained Internet attack that has caused outages and network congestion today for a large number of Web sites was launched with the help of hacked “Internet of Things” (IoT) devices, such as CCTV video cameras and digital video recorders, new data suggests.
  • A Peek Into the Clinton Campaign in Damage Control Mode, From the Podesta Emails

    10/21/2016 12:46:12 PM PDT · by Lorianne · 16 replies
    Intercept, the ^ | 19 October 2016 | Zaid Jilani
    When Hillary Clinton came under attack last February for her 2001 vote in favor of a bankruptcy bill that made it more difficult for poor people to discharge their debts, she defended herself by saying she did it for women and children. During an appearance on ABC News’s “This Week”, Clinton was confronted with a 2004 Bill Moyers video interview with then-consumer advocate Elizabeth Warren, in which she explained that she had personally briefed Clinton on the bankruptcy bill but that large financial contributions from the credit card industry had helped sway the senator in favor of it. Clinton responded...
  • Clinton Emails with Petraeus Reveal Her ‘BlackBerry Blues;’ Clinton Tells Then-CENTCOM Commander...

    10/20/2016 11:58:21 AM PDT · by jazusamo · 17 replies
    Judicial Watch ^ | October 20, 2016 | Tom Fitton
    Full title: Clinton Emails with Petraeus Reveal Her ‘BlackBerry Blues;’ Clinton Tells Then-CENTCOM Commander to Use Her ‘Personal Email Address’ (Washington, DC) – Judicial Watch today released new State Department documents containing email correspondence between former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Gen. David Petraeus, in which she had what she termed “blackberry blues” over her inability to use her BlackBerry inside her secure office. The FBI recovered these new emails from those not turned over by Hillary Clinton. These emails are government documents and not personal emails, as Clinton claims in defending her decision to not turn over 30,000...
  • Re: Obama Says He Didn’t Know Hillary Clinton Was Using Private Email Address -

    10/20/2016 6:40:02 AM PDT · by Protect the Bill of Rights · 50 replies
    The Podesta Emails ^ | October 20, 2016 | Clinton Machine
    Re: Obama Says He Didn’t Know Hillary Clinton Was Using Private Email Address - NYTimes.com From:pir@hrcoffice.com To: jennifer.m.palmieri@gmail.com Date: 2015-03-08 10:21 Subject: Re: Obama Says He Didn’t Know Hillary Clinton Was Using Private Email Address - NYTimes.com Ok. Sounds like people are putting words into his mouth. On Mar 8, 2015, at 7:56 AM, Jennifer Palmieri wrote: Suggest Philippe talk to Josh or Eric. They know POTUS and HRC emailed. Josh has been asked about that. Standard practice is not to confirm anything about his email, so his answer to press was that he would not comment/confirm. I recollect that...
  • Cspan video:Show this to those who don't fully grasp the severity of @HillaryClinton's email breach

    10/17/2016 9:20:16 PM PDT · by InvisibleChurch · 16 replies
    Twitter ^ | 10-17-16
    https://twitter.com/youngdems4trump/status/752960915444633601
  • Headline, “CIA plans cyber-attack on Russia” should say, “Frightened Obama goes Dr. Strangelove”

    10/17/2016 9:09:51 AM PDT · by Oldpuppymax · 16 replies
    The Coach's Team ^ | 10/17/16 | Kevin "Coach" Collins
    Okay, so now we are supposed to believe that Barack Obama, The Cowardly Lion is so worried about “The Russians” hacking the Democrats to pervert the outcome of the election that he is planning to plunge America into a nuclear war to stop them. Really? How very Dr. Strangelove of him! Whether The Cowardly Lion is bluffing or serious, once again he has shown us exactly why neither he, nor any other Democrat should ever be our Commander in Chief. If he is serious, then this “leak” is yet another “telegraphing” of our intentions; a politically inspired tip-off which would...
  • Why the FBI Let Hillary Go Free

    10/15/2016 5:44:17 PM PDT · by AndyJackson · 72 replies
    National Review ^ | Sep 29, 2016 | National Review
    National Review youtube video Thesis is that FBI let Hillary off because Obama was complicit in emailing classified info to Hillary on open channels. Taking down Hillary would have implicated Obama and so the whole thing was cooked
  • Cybersecurity Concerns Intelligence Officials

    10/07/2016 8:55:13 AM PDT · by Academiadotorg · 8 replies
    Accuracy in Academia ^ | October 7, 2016 | Spencer Irvine
    Cybersecurity is a huge concern for the CIA in today's world. At a panel during a recent CIA-George Washington University conference, several panelists from the CIA, the U.S. Naval Academy and cybersecurity consulting firms discussed the implications of hacking and encryption. Chris Darby, who is the president and CEO of the consulting firm In-Q-Tel, believed that cybersecurity is "not a U.S. conversation anymore" due to the international aspect of cybersecurity or cyberterrorism. He advised that Americans "have to get comfortable with that and take the appropriate steps to deal with it." Too often, Darby said, "We tend to look at...
  • The Democratization of Censorship [Krebs is back]

    09/25/2016 1:58:19 PM PDT · by snarkpup · 13 replies
    Krebs on Security ^ | Sept. 16, 2016 | Brian Krebs
    As many of you know, my site was taken offline for the better part of this week. The outage came in the wake of a historically large distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack which hurled so much junk traffic at Krebsonsecurity.com that my DDoS protection provider Akamai chose to unmoor my site from its protective harbor. ... Today, I am happy to report that the site is back up — this time under Project Shield, a free program run by Google to help protect journalists from online censorship. And make no mistake, DDoS attacks — particularly those the size of the assault...
  • ICANN's Secret Plot: rigged oversight, designs on .mil, $2.5 mil in lobbying

    09/21/2016 7:52:55 AM PDT · by Arthur Wildfire! March · 40 replies
    FR exclusive, many links to be provided in followup posts. | September 21, 2016 | Arthur March
    Condi Rice and Madam Albright are both tied to the $2.5 million lobby effort to get ICANN's internet 'transition' passed. [And evidence of 'walking around money'.] According to professional witness testimony this lobby effort was a ... pack ... of ... lies. [This exclusive uncovers all of that.] "Without [free speech protection] ICANN risks becoming an unregulated monopoly with no effective outside oversight and control." -- Paul Rosenzweig [professional witness at latest ICANN hearing] That's the fastest summary I've found yet: ... a "monopoly with no effective outside oversight". And one thing in their crosshairs is our military websites. They...
  • ICANN A FReeper List of Those Who Opposed (Vanity)

    09/21/2016 1:31:46 PM PDT · by The Westerner · 45 replies
    The Westerner
    For future reference, a list of congressmen or major public figures who opposed transfer of ICANN to foreign control is important. Granted that some senators are taking a stand now, for political reasons, but FReepers can put that on the list as background information. Please keep your post brief so the list can be skimmed quickly. Or separate the name and your comment with a paragraph. Some FReepers have argued that the impending transfer on October 1, 2016 is akin to giving Communist China the Panama Canal--or worse: because they who control domain name listings, control Free Speech. Some FReepers...
  • Trump opposes plan for U.S. to cede internet oversight

    09/21/2016 5:05:35 PM PDT · by Freedom56v2 · 62 replies
    Reuters ^ | September 21, 2016 | Dustin Volz
    Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump opposes a long-planned transition of oversight of the internet's technical management from the U.S. government to a global community of stakeholders, his campaign said in a statement on Wednesday. Congress should block the handover, scheduled to occur on Oct. 1, "or internet freedom will be lost for good, since there will be no way to make it great again once it is lost," Stephen Miller, national policy director for the Trump campaign, said in a statement. Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, a former presidential primary foe of Trump's who has refused to endorse the real...
  • Someone is learning & practicing how to take down the Internet

    09/18/2016 7:11:32 PM PDT · by Fractal Trader · 29 replies
    Fellowship of the Minds ^ | 18 September 2016 | Dr. Eowyn
    This is serious and genuinely alarming. Bruce Schneider is an expert in cyber-security, the Chief Technology Officer of Resilient, an IBM Company, a fellow at Harvard’s Berkman Center, and a board member of Electronic Frontier Foundation — an organization defending our rights in the digital world. In a blog post, Schneider sounds the alarm that in the past year, the websites of major companies that provide the Internet’s basic services repeatedly have been attacked, each time more sophisticated than the last, which suggests “someone” is practicing how to take down the Internet by learning from the companies’ defensive moves. Below...