More than 350 ethical hackers got together in cities across Australia on Friday for a hackathon in which they worked to “cyber trace a missing face”, in the first-ever capture the flag eventdevoted to finding missing persons.Learn more about this hackathon: . Organizers called the results “astounding,” ABC News reports. During the six hours the competing teams hammered away at the task of searching for clues that could potentially solve 12 of the country’s most frustrating cold cases. 100 leads were generated every 10 minutes. The National Missing Persons Hackathon was run by the AustCyber Canberra Innovation Node, which partnered with the Australian Federal Police, the National Missing Persons Coordination Centre and Trace Labs : a nonprofit with a mission of crowdsourcing open-source intelligence (OSINT) and training people on OSINT tradecraft. The link for this article located at NakedSecurity is no longer available. . Over 350 ethical security experts collaborated in Australia for an innovative hackathon aimed at locating missing individuals through open-source intelligence methods.. Ethical Hackathon, OSINT Techniques, Missing Persons, Digital Investigations, Cyber Forensics. . Brittany Day
How secure is your wireless router? The Def Con 22 hacker conference aims to find out exactly how resilient off the shelf products are next month during a six-day hackathon. . Seasoned hackers and security experts are being invited to break a number of wireless routers made by the likes of Linksys, Netgear and D-Link, with the intention of shaming manufacturers into making better kit. The link for this article located at recombu is no longer available. . Cybersecurity experts are encouraged to assess the vulnerabilities of leading Wi-Fi devices at Def Con 22 to identify potential weaknesses.. Router Security, Wireless Hacking, Def Con 22, Security Exploits, Hacker Community. . Dave Wreski
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