Tag Archive for: coders

US Army to test electronic warfare coders at the edge during upcoming exercise


WASHINGTON — The Army will pilot a new idea to place coders and software developers at the tactical edge to reprogram electronic warfare and radio frequency systems.

The pilot, dubbed Starblazor, will try to identify gaps in Army capabilities and provide information for its doctrine and policies.

Mainly, Starblazor will help the Army learn what is needed to train the cyber and electronic warfare operators with existing equipment and what these personnel will need for a future fight, Chief Warrant Officer 3 Eric Colon, CEMA technician at Army Cyber Command, told C4ISRNET.

The Starblazor effort will take place this summer during the larger Defender Pacific, a division-sized war game for joint multidomain operations in support of Indo-Pacific Command, which will also test new technologies and concepts.

Recently, the Army created a new military occupational specialty within its cyber branch dedicated to software development. Those specialists sit alongside operators and build tools on the spot to keep up with the dynamic environment of cyberspace.

Now, as the Army is gearing up to field a raft of electronic warfare equipment — including combined cyber and signals intelligence — it needs to be able to rapidly reprogram the systems to exploit new signals it may find over the course of a conflict.

If the Army finds itself in a conflict with a top nation-state, it will likely come across signals it hasn’t seen before. This presents problems for the force because it won’t know how to exploit or defeat those signals until it captures and classifies them. In the Cold War, this could take years, but now with software-defined systems, new signals can be deployed, detected and tweaked in weeks.

Starblazor is aimed toward the Army’s new 915th Cyber Warfare Battalion, which consists of 12 expeditionary cyber teams to augment brigades with additional cyber and electronic warfare capabilities, which the Army is still experimenting with equipment and staffing.

One intent of the group is to be able to go anywhere, utilize brigade-organic equipment and exploit hard targets by capturing a signal of interest, reverse engineering it and delivering an effect in months rather than years.

Starblazor…

Source…

Now Pushing Malware: NPM package dev logins slurped by hacked tool popular with coders

  1. Now Pushing Malware: NPM package dev logins slurped by hacked tool popular with coders  The Register
  2. Full coverage

malware news – read more

Tor coders harden the onion against surveillance

Nine coders are working on an exploit prevention tool to harden Tor against attacks. “Selfrando” could help lots of other software, too…
Naked Security – Sophos

Yes, even coders make the mistake of reusing passwords

GitHub has issued a security advisory:

On Tuesday evening PST, we became aware of unauthorized attempts to access a large number of GitHub.com accounts. This appears to be the result of an attacker using lists of email addresses and passwords from other online services that have been compromised in the past, and trying them on GitHub accounts. We immediately began investigating, and found that the attacker had been able to log in to a number of GitHub accounts.

The end result is that for some accounts “other personal information including listings of accessible repositories and organizations may have been exposed.” Yuck.

GitHub has reset passwords for affected accounts and is reaching out to affected users.

It’s important to underline that GitHub itself didn’t suffer a breach. The passwords were probably gleaned from mega-breaches on other sites such as LinkedIn and Tumblr.

Repeat after me:

Thou shalt not make to thyself the same password on different websites, and thou shalt enable two-factor authentication pronto.

Graham Cluley