Attackers could shut down power grids by abusing solar panel flaws
An attacker could exploit vulnerabilities found in solar panel components to shut down large parts of a power grid, claims a security researcher.
David Bisson reports.
An attacker could exploit vulnerabilities found in solar panel components to shut down large parts of a power grid, claims a security researcher.
David Bisson reports.
House panel to probe debit card data breach
The Hindu Concerned over the biggest-ever breach of debit card data, a parliamentary panel on finance will examine various security issues related to payments in the banking sector and has asked government officials and representatives of some banks to appear … |
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Tech Orchard panel: How employers can address mobile security issues
Kansas City Business Journal Overland Park-based Tech Orchard hosted a mobility panel Thursday evening, and the panelists shared a number of tips for addressing mobile security and gaining employee buy-in. Subscribe to get the full story. Already a subscriber? Sign in. Subscribe … |
Some of the world’s best known cryptographers – veterans of the crypto wars of the 1990s – say government access to encryption keys is still a bad idea, but is an issue that will never go away because it’s something intelligence agencies crave.
Speaking at RSA 2015’s Cryptographer’s panel, Whitfield Diffie, who pioneered public-key encryption, says key escrow schemes where government could gain access to encrypted data works mainly to the benefit of government. “They want you to be secure but not against them,” he says.
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Ron Rivest, an MIT professor and the R in RSA encryption, says key escrow has problems in that it opens many parties to messages that are encrypted for passage across public networks, not just the U.S. government. Other governments would take advantage of it, too, destroying any real hope of privacy. “This is going to be a house of many doors and many parties and it’s just not going to work,” Rivest says.
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