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Breaking into a Garage
From Schneier on Security

Breaking into a Garage

In seconds. Garage doors with automatic openers have always seemed like a lot of security theater to me.

Friday Squid Blogging: Squid Computer Virus
From Schneier on Security

Friday Squid Blogging: Squid Computer Virus

It wasn't me: A hardened computer hacker has been arrested on suspicion of writing a computer virus that systematically destroys all the files on victims' PCs...

Cloning Retail Gift Cards
From Schneier on Security

Cloning Retail Gift Cards

Clever attack. After researching how gift cards work, Zepeda purchased a magnetic card reader online, began stealing blank gift cards, on display for purchase,...

Security Analysis of Smudges on Smart Phone Touch Screens
From Schneier on Security

Security Analysis of Smudges on Smart Phone Touch Screens

"Smudge Attacks on Smartphone Touch Screens": Abstract: Touch screens are an increasingly common feature on personal computing devices, especially smartphones...

Late Teens and Facebook Privacy
From Schneier on Security

Late Teens and Facebook Privacy

Facebook Privacy Settings: Who Cares?" by danah boyd and Eszter Hargittai. Abstract: With over 500 million users, the decisions that Facebook makes about its...

Apple JailBreakMe Vulnerability
From Schneier on Security

Apple JailBreakMe Vulnerability

Good information from Mikko Hypp

A Revised Taxonomy of Social Networking Data
From Schneier on Security

A Revised Taxonomy of Social Networking Data

Lately I've been reading about user security and privacy -- control, really -- on social networking sites. The issues are hard and the solutions harder, but I'm...

P ? NP?
From Schneier on Security

P ? NP?

There's a new paper circulating that claims to prove that P ? NP. The paper has not been refereed, and I haven't seen any independent verifications or refutations...

Ant Warfare
From Schneier on Security

Ant Warfare

Interesting: According to Moffett, we might actually learn a thing or two from how ants wage war. For one, ant armies operate with precise organization despite...

Friday Squid Blogging: Canadian Squid Stamp
From Schneier on Security

Friday Squid Blogging: Canadian Squid Stamp

It's a giant fiberglass squid from Newfoundland.

Yet Another Way to Sneak Liquids onto an Airplane
From Schneier on Security

Yet Another Way to Sneak Liquids onto an Airplane

Coffee cup disguised as a camera lens.

More Brain Scans to Detect Future Terrorists
From Schneier on Security

More Brain Scans to Detect Future Terrorists

Worked well in a test: For the first time, the Northwestern researchers used the P300 testing in a mock terrorism scenario in which the subjects are planning,More...

NSA and the National Cryptologic Museum
From Schneier on Security

NSA and the National Cryptologic Museum

Most people might not be aware of it, but there's a National Cryptologic Museum at Ft. Meade, at NSA Headquarters. It's hard to know its exact relationship with...

WikiLeaks Insurance File
From Schneier on Security

WikiLeaks Insurance File

Now this is an interesting development: In the wake of strong U.S. government statements condemning WikiLeaks' recent publishing of 77,000 Afghan War documents...

UAE to Ban BlackBerrys
From Schneier on Security

UAE to Ban BlackBerrys

The United Arab Emirates -- Dubai, etc. -- is threatening to ban BlackBerrys because they can't eavesdrop on them. At the heart of the battle is access to thecomplicated...

Location-Based Quantum Encryption
From Schneier on Security

Location-Based Quantum Encryption

Location-based encryption -- a system by which only a recipient in a specific location can decrypt the message -- fails because location can be spoofed. Now asolved...

Eavesdropping Smartphone Apps
From Schneier on Security

Eavesdropping Smartphone Apps

Seems there are a lot of them. They do it for marketing purposes. Really, they seem to do it because the code base they use does it automatically or just because...

Book Review: How Risky Is It, Really?
From Schneier on Security

Book Review: How Risky Is It, Really?

David Ropeik is a writer and consultant who specializes in risk perception and communication. His book, How Risky Is It, Really?: Why Our Fears Don't Always Match...

Friday Squid Blogging: Squid Launcher from "Despicable Me"
From Schneier on Security

Friday Squid Blogging: Squid Launcher from "Despicable Me"

Don't squid me, bro.

Doomsday Shelters
From Schneier on Security

Doomsday Shelters

Selling fear: The Vivos network, which offers partial ownerships similar to a timeshare in underground shelter communities, is one of several ventures touting...
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