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AT&T Employees Took Bribes to Unlock Smartphones
From Schneier on Security

AT&T Employees Took Bribes to Unlock Smartphones

This wasn't a small operation: A Pakistani man bribed AT&T call-center employees to install malware and unauthorized hardware as part of a scheme to fraudulently...

Brazilian Cell Phone Hack
From Schneier on Security

Brazilian Cell Phone Hack

I know there's a lot of politics associated with this story, but concentrate on the cybersecurity aspect for a moment. The cell phones of a thousand Brazilians,...

Phone Farming for Ad Fraud
From Schneier on Security

Phone Farming for Ad Fraud

Interesting article on people using banks of smartphones to commit ad fraud for profit. No one knows how prevalent ad fraud is on the Internet. I believe it is...

Regulating International Trade in Commercial Spyware
From Schneier on Security

Regulating International Trade in Commercial Spyware

Siena Anstis, Ronald J. Deibert, John Scott-Railton of Citizen Lab published an editorial calling for regulating the international trade in commercial surveillance...

Friday Squid Blogging: Piglet Squid Video
From Schneier on Security

Friday Squid Blogging: Piglet Squid Video

Really neat. As usual, you can also use this squid post to talk about the security stories in the news that I haven't covered. Read my blog posting guidelines here...

More on Backdooring (or Not) WhatsApp
From Schneier on Security

More on Backdooring (or Not) WhatsApp

Yesterday, I blogged about a Facebook plan to backdoor WhatsApp by adding client-side scanning and filtering. It seems that I was wrong, and there are no such plans...

Disabling Security Cameras with Lasers
From Schneier on Security

Disabling Security Cameras with Lasers

There's a really interesting video of protesters in Hong Kong using some sort of laser to disable security cameras. I know nothing more about the technologies involved...

How Privacy Laws Hurt Defendants
From Schneier on Security

How Privacy Laws Hurt Defendants

Rebecca Wexler has an interesting op-ed about an inadvertent harm that privacy laws can cause: while law enforcement can often access third-party data to aid in...

Facebook Plans on Backdooring WhatsApp
From Schneier on Security

Facebook Plans on Backdooring WhatsApp

This article points out that Facebook's planned content moderation scheme will result in an encryption backdoor into WhatsApp: In Facebook's vision, the actual...

Another Attack Against Driverless Cars
From Schneier on Security

Another Attack Against Driverless Cars

In this piece of research, attackers successfully attack a driverless car system -- Renault Captur's "Level 0" autopilot (Level 0 systems advise human drivers but...

ACLU on the GCHQ Backdoor Proposal
From Schneier on Security

ACLU on the GCHQ Backdoor Proposal

Back in January, two senior GCHQ officials proposed a specific backdoor for communications systems. It was universally derided as unworkable -- by me, as well....

Wanted: Cybersecurity Imagery
From Schneier on Security

Wanted: Cybersecurity Imagery

Eli Sugarman of the Hewlettt Foundation laments about the sorry state of cybersecurity imagery: The state of cybersecurity imagery is, in a word, abysmal. A simple...

Friday Squid Blogging: Humbolt Squid in Mexico is Getting Smaller
From Schneier on Security

Friday Squid Blogging: Humbolt Squid in Mexico is Getting Smaller

The Humbolt squid are getting smaller: Rawley and the other researchers found a flurry of factors that drove the jumbo squid's demise. The Gulf of California historically...

Insider Logic Bombs
From Schneier on Security

Insider Logic Bombs

Add to the "not very smart criminals" file: According to court documents, Tinley provided software services for Siemens' Monroeville, PA offices for nearly ten...

Software Developers and Security
From Schneier on Security

Software Developers and Security

According to a survey: "68% of the security professionals surveyed believe it's a programmer's job to write secure code, but they also think less than half of developers...

Attorney General William Barr on Encryption Policy
From Schneier on Security

Attorney General William Barr on Encryption Policy

Yesterday, Attorney General William Barr gave a major speech on encryption policy -- what is commonly known as "going dark." Speaking at Fordham University in New...

Science Fiction Writers Helping Imagine Future Threats
From Schneier on Security

Science Fiction Writers Helping Imagine Future Threats

The French army is going to put together a team of science fiction writers to help imagine future threats. Leaving aside the question of whether science fiction...

Hackers Expose Russian FSB Cyberattack Projects
From Schneier on Security

Hackers Expose Russian FSB Cyberattack Projects

More nation-state activity in cyberspace, this time from Russia: Per the different reports in Russian media, the files indicate that SyTech had worked since 2009...

Friday Squid Blogging: Squid Mural
From Schneier on Security

Friday Squid Blogging: Squid Mural

Large squid mural in the Bushwick neighborhood of Brooklyn. As usual, you can also use this squid post to talk about the security stories in the news that I haven't...

A Harlequin Romance Novel about Hackers
From Schneier on Security

A Harlequin Romance Novel about Hackers

Really....
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