At the DefCon Voting Village in Las Vegas last year, participants proved it was child’s play to hack voting machines: As Wired reported, within two minutes, democracy-tech researcher Carsten Schürmann used a novel vulnerability to get remote access to a WinVote machine. . This year, it was literally child’s play: the DefCon village this past weekend invited 50 kids between the ages of 8 and 16 to compromise replicas of states’ websites in the so-called “DEFCON Voting Machine Hacking Village.” 11-year-old Emmett Brewer is too young to vote, but it turned out that he’s not too young to learn how to change election results on a replica of Florida’s state website… in under 10 minutes, mind you, as the Voting Village announced on Friday. The link for this article located at Naked Security/Sophos is no longer available. . This year, it was literally child’s play: the DefCon village this past weekend invited 50 kids bet. defcon, voting, village, vegas, participants, proved, child’s. . Brittany Day
A 15-year-old boy has been arrested for hacking into 259 companies during a 90-day spree. In other words, during the last quarter he successfully attacked an average of three websites per day.. Austrian police have arrested a 15-year-old student suspected of hacking into 259 companies across the span of three months. Authorities allege the suspect scanned the Internet for vulnerabilities and bugs in websites and databases that he could then exploit. As soon as he was questioned, the young boy confessed to the attacks, according to Austria The link for this article located at ZDNet Blogs is no longer available. . German law enforcement arrests young hacker linked to breaching over 200 firms within a quarter-year hacking campaign, taking advantage of system flaws.. Teenage Hacker, Cybercrime Arrests, Website Vulnerabilities, Youth Hacking, Internet Exploits. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The clock had just struck midnight when users logged onto a popular chat site noticed a rather short message flashing up on their monitors: "DOS attack". To the majority, it may not have meant much, but to 16-year-old Ankit Fadia sitting . . . . The clock had just struck midnight when users logged onto a popular chat site noticed a rather short message flashing up on their monitors: "DOS attack". To the majority, it may not have meant much, but to 16-year-old Ankit Fadia sitting in front of his PC in the Indian capital Delhi it was a "Denial of Service" attack - someone somewhere was trying to hack into a website. Within seconds, he had managed to track the location of the sender - from somewhere in Pakistan. Minutes later he had also found the target of attack - the website of a top Indian firm. They were soon alerted and a major hack was averted. The link for this article located at BBC is no longer available. . The clock had just struck midnight when users logged onto a popular chat site noticed a rather short. clock, struck, midnight, users, logged, popular, noticed, rather, short. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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