Tag Archive for: turned

Google Engineers Hacked The PlayStation Portal And Turned It Into A PSP Emulator


Sony’s PlayStation Portal handheld is designed to stream games from your PS5, but that hasn’t stopped Google engineers from hacking the device to run emulated PSP games. Google security engineer Calle Svensson and cloud vulnerability researcher Andy Nguyen showed off some of their work on X/Twitter, revealing a PlayStation Portal running the PSP version of Grand Theft Auto 3 through the PPSSPP emulator.

Nguyn added in a second tweet that the hack is entirely software-based, allowing the engineers to exploit vulnerabilities in the handheld without needing to change its hardware. Don’t expect this hack to go public, as Nguyen said there are currently no plans to release it.

Sony has only released a few consoles of the portable variety over the years, as it ventured into this market with the PSP in 2004 and followed it up with the PS Vita in 2011. Each handheld console received several revisions over the years, but the PlayStation Portal takes a different approach to stand out from competitor devices like the Nintendo Switch, Steam Deck, and ROG Ally. Combining a sharp display with DualSense-inspired controllers, the PlayStation portal streams games from your PS5 over wi-fi and was launched late last year.

“With a limited use-case and inconsistent performance from remote play, as well as the way it rarely takes advantage of the PS5 ecosystem, the PlayStation Portal is tough to recommend,” Michael Higham wrote in GameSpot’s PlayStation Portal hands-on feature. “If the PS5 is your primary gaming platform, and if you have a strong internet connection throughout your home, and if you’re in situations where you’re eager to play PS5 games without access to the TV the console is connected to, then you’ll get plenty of use out of the Portal.”

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How a Russian spyware company ‘hacked’ ChatGPT, turned it to spy on internet users


How a Russian spyware company 'hacked' ChatGPT, turned it to spy on internet users

A Russian spying company that has an expertise in online hacking and spying was able to bypass OpenAI’s ChatGPT turn it into a spyware for spying on people who use the internet. The spying company was involved in sentiment analysis and hacking

In a recent investigative report, Forbes revealed that Social Links, a Russian spyware company previously banned from Meta’s platforms for alleged surveillance activities, has co-opted ChatGPT for spying on people using the internet.

This unsettling revelation of ChatGPT which involves collecting and analyzing social media data to gauge users’ sentiments, adds yet another controversial dimension to ChatGPT’s use cases.

Presenting its unconventional utilization of ChatGPT at a security conference in Paris, Social Links showcased the chatbot’s proficiency in text summarization and analysis. By feeding data, obtained through its proprietary tool, related to online discussions about a recent controversy in Spain, the company demonstrated how ChatGPT could quickly process and categorize sentiments as positive, negative, or neutral. The results were then presented using an interactive graph.

Privacy advocates, however, find this development deeply troubling. Beyond the immediate concerns raised by this specific case, there is a broader worry about the potential for AI to amplify the capabilities of the surveillance industry.

Rory Mir, Associate Director of Community Organizing at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, expressed apprehension that AI could enable law enforcement to expand surveillance efforts, allowing smaller teams to monitor larger groups more efficiently.

Mir highlighted the existing practice of police agencies using fake…

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Pioneering hacker Kevin Mitnick, felon turned security guru, dead at 59


Kevin Mitnick, whose pioneering antics tricking employees in the 1980s and 1990s into helping him steal software and services from big phone and tech companies made him the most celebrated U.S. hacker, has died at age 59.

Mitnick died Sunday in Las Vegas after a 14-month battle with pancreatic cancer, said Stu Sjouwerman, CEO of the security training firm KnowBe4, where Mitnick was chief hacking officer.

His colorful career — from student tinkerer to FBI-hunted fugitive, imprisoned felon and finally respected cybersecurity professional, public speaker and author tapped for advice by U.S. lawmakers and global corporations — mirrors the evolution of society’s grasp of the nuances of computer hacking.

Through Mitnick’s professional trajectory, and what many consider the misplaced prosecutorial zeal that put him behind bars for nearly five years until 2000, the public has learned how to better distinguish serious computer crime from the mischievious troublemaking of youths hellbent on proving their hacking prowess.

“He never hacked for money,” said Sjouwerman, who became Mitnick’s business partner in 2011. He was mostly after trophies, chiefly cellphone code, he said.

Much fanfare accompanied Mitnick’s high-profile arrest in 1995, three years after he’d skipped probation on a previous computer break-in charge. The government accused him of causing millions of dollars in damages to companies including Motorola, Novell, Nokia and Sun Microsystems by stealing software and altering computer code.

But federal prosecutors had difficulty gathering evidence of major crimes, and after being jailed for nearly four years, Mitnick reached a plea agreement in 1999 that credited him for time served.

Upon his January 2000 release from prison, Mitnick told reporters his “were simple crimes of trespass.” He said ”I wanted to know as much as I could find out about how phone networks worked.”

Kevin Mitnick in Denver to give a presentation to BBVA Compass bank clients
Kevin Mitnick in 2018. John Leyba / Denver Post via Getty Images

He was initially barred for three years from using computers, modems, cell phones or anything else that could give him internet access — and from public speaking. Those requirements were gradually eased but he wasn’t allowed back…

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Mitnick, hacker turned security guru, dies – Times News Online


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