Security researchers need to fight for the rights to study, modify and reverse engineer Internet hardware and software or the general population risks losing Internet freedom, the Black Hat 2015 conference was told.. . Security researchers need to fight for the rights to study, modify and reverse engineer Internet har. security, researchers, fight, rights, study, modify, reverse, engineer, internet. . Anthony Pell
When mass political protests erupted throughout Brazil in June, Miguel Freitas did what countless others did: He followed the news on Twitter. Tweets revealed information he couldn. He believes that Twitter plays a major role in promoting democracy and organizing protests in places like Brazil and the Middle East The link for this article located at Wired is no longer available. . He believes that Twitter plays a major role in promoting democracy and organizing protests in places. political, protests, erupted, throughout, brazil, miguel, freitas, countless. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
One of the people accused by U.S. authorities of being at the core of Lulz Security, perhaps the most feared hacking group on the planet, led a nonprofit group in Galway, Ireland, dedicated to making websites more secure.. Darren Martyn, who was named in an indictment unsealed in Manhattan federal court on Tuesday, was a local chapter leader of the Open Web Application Security Project, which develops open-source applications to improve security, according to an official at the international group. Thomas Brennan, who is a director of OWASP's parent group, said Martyn resigned last week. The link for this article located at Reuters is no longer available. . Darren Martyn exemplifies a unique duality, moving from LulzSec hacker to respected OWASP leader, balancing rebellion with cybersecurity integrity while promoting web safety. Darren Martyn, LulzSec, Cyber Threats, OWASP, Open Source Security. . Anthony Pell
MIT student Keith Winstein and alum Marc Horowitz say they're out to prove a point: Publishing code that decrypts and plays DVD movies is not a crime. In their case, they assert it's about teaching copyright issues and is thus protected . . . . MIT student Keith Winstein and alum Marc Horowitz say they're out to prove a point: Publishing code that decrypts and plays DVD movies is not a crime. In their case, they assert it's about teaching copyright issues and is thus protected under the First Amendment. Last week, a Web site published the pair's seven-line program, which unscrambles the protection around a DVD so quickly that a movie can play at the same time, although the film appears choppy. It's the shortest program to break DVD defenses to date. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . MIT student Keith Winstein and alum Marc Horowitz say they're out to prove a point: Publishing code . student, keith, winstein, horowitz, they're, prove, point, publishing. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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