Tag Archive for: cracked

How a security ninja cracked the password guarding his most valued assets

Jeremiah Grossman is widely considered to be one of the world’s most talented ethical hackers, but even his ninja-like prowess wasn’t enough to recover a forgotten password used to encrypt sensitive work documents contained on his MacBook Pro.

After fiddling with a freely available password cracking program, the CTO of Whitehat Security soon realized that its plodding speed—about one password guess per second—meant it would likely take him decades of tries before he arrived at the right one. That’s when he called in the big guns, namely Solar Designer and other principals behind the free John the Ripper password cracker as well as Jeremi Gosney, a password security expert at Stricture Consulting Group. (Ars has chronicled Gosney’s cracking prowess in articles here and here.)

“Collectively, these guys are amongst the world’s foremost experts in password cracking,” Grossman wrote in a blog post describing the odyssey unlocking the crucial files. “If they can’t help, no one can. No joking around, they immediately dove right in.”

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Ars Technica » Technology Lab

Flame malware server password cracked – ITWorld Canada


ITWorld Canada

Flame malware server password cracked
ITWorld Canada
A Kaspersky researcher has cracked the password for a server that controlled the infamous Flame malware, according to NetworkWorld. Apparently, analyst Dmitry Bestuzhev was able to do so only hours after Symantec appealed for help in doing so.

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flame malware – read more

Apple’s iPhone 4S Cracked Open, Money Spills Out (Arik Hesseldahl/AllThingsD)

Arik Hesseldahl / AllThingsD:
Apple’s iPhone 4S Cracked Open, Money Spills Out  —  From the outside, Apple’s iPhone 4S looks an awful lot like its predecessor, the iPhone 4.  Apple fans and investors were initially so disappointed when the phone turned out not to be a more revolutionary iPhone 5, the company’s shares fell on October 4 …

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Can fingerprint security on a computer or flash drive be cracked? How secure is it?

Some laptops, for instance from Dell, and some PDAs, and some flash drives (such as SanDisk Profile) have a built in fingerprint recognition for security. Can this be hacked? Could a motivated civilian computer geek do it? or would it take heavy-duty resources like FBI or NSA to do so? I keep mildly sensitive files on my flash drive and want to keep these safe if I lose the flash drive. I am computer-challenged and know zilch about security. Any thoughts?