Tag Archive for: cracked

How the FBI Cracked a Chinese Spy Ring – New Yorker (blog)


New Yorker (blog)

How the FBI Cracked a Chinese Spy Ring
New Yorker (blog)
The investigation of Chi Mak—followed by the successful investigation and prosecution of Greg Chung—turned out to be a milestone in the F.B.I.'s efforts against Chinese espionage, and demonstrated that Chinese spies had indeed been stealing U.S. …

Espionage China – read more

Chaos Computer Club claims to have “cracked” the iPhone 5s fingerprint sensor

The biometrics team of Germany’s well-known Chaos Computer Club claims it has “cracked” Apple’s Touch ID system. From a fingerprint left on glass, the team claims to have used a technique documented by the CCC back in 2004 to produce a “fake finger.”
Naked Security – Sophos

Cisco switches to weaker hashing scheme, passwords cracked wide open

Password cracking experts have reversed a secret cryptographic formula recently added to Cisco devices. Ironically, the encryption type 4 algorithm leaves users considerably more susceptible to password cracking than an older alternative, even though the new routine was intended to enhance protections already in place.

It turns out that Cisco’s new method for converting passwords into one-way hashes uses a single iteration of the SHA256 function with no cryptographic salt. The revelation came as a shock to many security experts because the technique requires little time and computing resources. As a result, relatively inexpensive computers used by crackers can try a dizzying number of guesses when attempting to guess the corresponding plain-text password. For instance, a system outfitted with two AMD Radeon 6990 graphics cards that run a soon-to-be-released version of the Hashcat password cracking program can cycle through more than 2.8 billion candidate passwords each second.

By contrast, the type 5 algorithm the new scheme was intended to replace used 1,000 iterations of the MD5 hash function. The large number of repetitions forces cracking programs to work more slowly and makes the process more costly to attackers. Even more important, the older function added randomly generated cryptographic “salt” to each password, preventing crackers from tackling large numbers of hashes at once.

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Ars Technica » Technology Lab

Has HTTPS finally been cracked? Five researchers deal SSL/TLS a biggish blow…

Cryptographers have once again put SSL/TLS (that’s the padlock in HTTPS) in their gunsights and opened fire. This time, they’ve done some severe damage. Paul Ducklin takes a detailed look…
Naked Security – Sophos