This paper examines the dramatic visual fingerprints left by a wide variety of popular network attack tools in order to better understand the specific methodologies used by attackers as well as the identifiable characteristics of the tools themselves. The techniques used are entirely passive in nature and virtually undetectable by the attackers. While much work has been done on active and passive operating systems detection, little has been done on fingerprinting the specific tools used by attackers. This research explores the application of several visualization techniques and their usefulness toward identification of attack tools, without the typical automated intrusion detection system’s signatures and statistical anomalies. These visualizations were tested using a wide range of popular network security tools and the results show that in many cases, the specific tool can be identified and provides intuition that many classes of zero-day attacks can be rapidly detected and analyzed using similar techniques. . The link for this article located at Rumint.org is no longer available. . Investigate the latent visual indicators created by cyber assault utilities to improve defense strategies.. Network Attack, Fingerprinting Techniques, Cyber Attack Tools. . Benjamin D. Thomas
SDMI is the music industry forum trying to build a system for protecting digital music against being illegal copying. The outfit launched the Hack SDMI challenge last month to invite the public to attack its digital watermark technology and possibly win . . . . SDMI is the music industry forum trying to build a system for protecting digital music against being illegal copying. The outfit launched the Hack SDMI challenge last month to invite the public to attack its digital watermark technology and possibly win a $10,000 prize. Computer scientists and electrical engineers at Princeton, along with outside teams led by graduates of Princeton's computer science program, claim that they were able to remove the watermarks placed in music files by SDMI, without significantly degrading the audio quality. The link for this article located at LinuxToday is no longer available. . Princeton's research team tackled SDMI's digital watermarking methods designed to protect music from piracy, uncovering key vulnerabilities in existing systems. Digital Watermark Protection, Music Industry Innovations, Audio Quality Challenges. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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