Sensitive US military documents, including training materials for the MQ-9A Reaper drone and an operations manual for the M1 Abrams tank, were recently available for sale on the Dark Web.. A single hacker with apparently moderate technical skills accessed one set of the leaked documents from the computer of a captain at 432d Aircraft Maintenance Squadron Reaper AMU OIC, at the Creech AFB in Nevada, says intelligence firm Recorded Future. The data that was stolen included Reaper maintenance books and the list of airmen assigned to the military drone program at the base. The link for this article located at DarkReading is no longer available. . A single hacker with apparently moderate technical skills accessed one set of the leaked documents f. sensitive, military, documents, training, materials, mq-9a, reaper, drone. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
A new worm targeting Linux routers is exploiting them not through a vulnerability per se, but rather by simply brute-forcing weak passwords, according to researchers at ESET. The malware, which researchers have dubbed Linux/Moose, could be used for a wide variety of purposes -- including DNS hijacking, DDoSing, and deep network penetration -- but so far attackers only seem to be using it for tame social networking fraud.. Moose intercepts unencrypted network traffic and its main payload is a generic proxy service. . Moose intercepts unencrypted network traffic and its main payload is a generic proxy service.. targeting, linux, routers, exploiting, through, vulnerability, rather. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
A whole range of Arcor, Asus and TP-Link routers are vulnerable to being reconfigured remotely without authorisation. On his blog, security researcher Bogdan Calin demonstrates that just displaying an email within the router's own network can have far-reaching consequences: when opened, his specially crafted test email reconfigures the wireless router so that it redirects the user's internet data traffic.. An attacker could exploit this to, for example, redirect unwitting users to a phishing site and harvest their details when they are trying to log into facebook.com. The link for this article located at H Security is no longer available. . An intruder might leverage this vulnerability to mislead unsuspecting individuals to a fraudulent webpage, thereby capturing confidential data.. Router Exploits, Remote Configuration Threats, Asus Vulnerabilities. . Dave Wreski
Router manufacturer D-Link admitted that some of its routers have a vulnerability that could allow hackers access to a device's administrative settings, but it has issued patches.. According to a blog post from SourceSec Security Research, some D-Link routers have an insecure implementation of the Home Network Administration Protocol (HNAP), which could allow an unauthorised person to change a router's settings. SourceSec published a proof-of-concept software tool called HNAP0wn that would enable the hack, a move that D-Link criticised. "By publicising their tool and giving specific instructions, the authors of the report have publicly outlined how the security can be breached, which could have had serious repercussions for our customers," D-Link said in a statement. The link for this article located at Tech World is no longer available. . According to a blog post from SourceSec Security Research, some D-Link routers have an insecure impl. router, manufacturer, d-link, admitted, routers, vulnerability, allow. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Robert Moore, a 23-year old hacker from Washington, summarizes his $1 million heist of VoIP minutes. His methods involved brute-force attacks against Cisco XM routers and Quintum Tenor voice gateways in order to gain access and route calls through them. Just to clarify (FTA) - the attacks could easily have been prevented if the default passwords were changed on the routers. Even so, read on to find out how he confused the intrusion detection systems, how he gained the address to attack, and how he knew which attacks to send to which ports. . The link for this article located at Network World is no longer available. . Uncover the story of how a cybercriminal orchestrated a $1 million VoIP scam by deploying brute-force tactics and sidestepping protective measures.. VoIP Security,Hacking Techniques,Service Provider Breach. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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