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Hot-Spot Hazards February 24, 2007

Posted by eastvalleygeeks in Uncategorized.
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Hot spots are hot. Located in thousands of airport lounges, hotels, cafés, and even public parks, they allow anyone with an 802.11b wireless LAN card to surf the Web, check e-mail, or even connect to the company LAN at broadband speeds. Before you experience the thrill of surfing the Net while nursing a latte at Starbucks, however, be sure you take the necessary precautions.

All wireless LANs have security issues, but wireless hot spots raise unique concerns. As with any wireless LAN, signals can penetrate walls and ceilings. That means that anyone in range with a standard wireless card can connect, even if they’re sitting out in the parking lot. story here

How Does The Hacker Economy Work? February 12, 2007

Posted by eastvalleygeeks in Uncategorized.
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Hacking isn’t a kid’s game anymore. It’s big business. Online black markets are flush with stolen credit card data, driver’s license numbers, and malware, the programs that let hackers exploit the security weaknesses of commercial software. Cybercriminals have become an organized bunch; they use peer-to-peer payment systems just like they’re buying and selling on eBay, and they’re not afraid to work together.

While the independent hacker still exists (pardon us, but in this story, we’ll refer to “hacker” in the layman’s sense), the FBI sees true organized crime in parts of the hacking community, particularly in Eastern Europe, says special agent Chris Stangl, who works in the bureau’s cybercrime division, the agency’s third largest behind counter-terrorism and intelligence. “You’ll have hackers cracking the machines, individuals collecting the data, and individuals selling for profit,” Stangl says. full story here