physorg.com — In the end, it was hackers at DefCon that got hacked. After three days of software cracking duels and hacking seminars, self-described computer ninjas at the infamous gathering in Las Vegas found out Sunday that their online activities were hijacked without them catching on.
Aug 12, 2008 View in Crawl 4
seth024Aug 13, 2008
I hacked your incorrect spelling and grammar and I fixed it.
cyclonethAug 13, 2008
Well, if you had taken the time to read my post, you'd notice that I said that I didn't trust my my personal information to be secure even with tor active.
vincentweberAug 13, 2008
Yes! The new ones are wireless. I have told this could happen but noooooo, I was being annoying and paranoid. "They are such important devices, [companies] will make them a 100% secure. Just STFU and put on your tinfoil hat. Go make a conspiracy vid while we go do [something extremely NOT important]."Well guess what happened at Defcon...BTW: the people I am talking about are 50 year old parents with kids, including a doctor and other medical people ridiculing me with their IQ
vincentweberAug 13, 2008
below 110^somehow that wasn't uploaded...
nabukadnezarAug 14, 2008
these attacks are old stuff for certain Romanians hackers. we were poisoning bgp tables for all kind of purposes 7-8 years ago<a class="user" href="http://bogus-software.com/">http://bogus-software.com/</a>
jzp_diggAug 14, 2008
This fails for networks that properly manage their customer edges. There is NO reason as-path forgery should be allowed, and isn't on many networks. Focus on the as-path rather than thee hand-wringing of scaling problems with prefixes. Don't buy from networks that have crap policies. Don't build networks with crap policies. Complain to networks with crap policies.