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Infiltrator

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Everything posted by Infiltrator

  1. Ideally you want to have a standalone machine set up as media server, with a good amount of ram and a good processor as well. If you use your own desktop computer, it may not be able to handle the load.
  2. I think she is going to win the pledge. The pledge Its around $15,447.00 now.
  3. You can configure Assassin as a spam filter for Postfix, that's what PostFix uses for fighting spams. http://www.akadia.com/services/postfix_spamassassin.html
  4. Subsonic would be a good choice, for a media server. It has a web-interface where you can access all the media stuff http://www.subsonic.org/pages/download.jsp It also support Ubuntu and other operating systems.
  5. Yep just like Ironman has. Then it would be the vulnerable spot on the suit.
  6. Well the more crap your install on the computer, the more it becomes vulnerable. And more time you have to spend on patching up or updating software.
  7. I am pretty sure if the designer of the suit, would ever image of installing a nuclear device to power it up, he would certainly think of ways to protect it at all cost. It would make a lot of sense to not leave it exposed and making it a target for a snipper. I know there are certainly other ways to generate electricity in a safer manner to use than having a nuclear reactor strapped to your back. It was just a figure of speech by the way. Fuel Cells would probably be a lot safer to be around than nuclear cells.
  8. I wonder if the worm is modular? If it is than, they may already be planing on another version of Stuxnet.
  9. They could design a small portable and safe to use, nuclear device that could provide sufficient energy to last for a few weeks. Just like the terminators.
  10. Can you recommend any opensource/freeware one?
  11. This is a very popular one http://www.worldbench.com/
  12. I saw that on TV before, pretty impressive, future days finally became reality. Also she is still very short on her goal, Lets help her come on people.
  13. Women are very smart in this sort of business, that's why we man must always stay a step ahead of them. That's why we got the balls.
  14. "Stuxnet worm created by team of hackers working for country, experts say" A POWERFUL computer code attacking industrial facilities around the world, but mainly in Iran, was probably created by experts working for a country or a well-funded private group. Creating the malicious code required a team of as many as five to 10 highly educated and well-funded hackers. Source: http://www.news.com.au/technology/stuxnet-...0-1225929809035
  15. Source: http://www.news.com.au/technology/iron-man...0-1225930857697 US military tech firm Raytheon Sarcos is living the dream. As long as that dream is to don a mechanical suit, smash through bits of thick pine and press a hundred kilos just for fun. And let's face it - who doesn't want to be Iron Man? Since the Marvel superhero's arrival in cinemas, progress toward recreating his exoskeleton has been, well, steady. Geriatric Japanese farmers gathered radishes with the benefit of the Power Assist Suit. US soldiers eagerly awaited their HULC arms. Read more: http://www.news.com.au/technology/iron-man...7#ixzz10oO2pTpJ And Raytheon Sarcos itself beat them all to the punch with its original XOS 1 back in 2008, which, unfortunately, required plugging in if it was required for any longer than 40 minutes. All of which were mildly impressive, but not exactly giving soldiers the capacity to blast of to the rescue of poor villagers terrorised by rogue warlords at a moment's notice. Raytheon Sarcos, to its credit, looks like sticking to the job at hand, although the lure of millions of dollars in funding from the US military no doubt makes it more attractive. Yesterday, it unveiled to the world XOS 2, the upgrade that it says confines XOS 1 to the "proof of concept" bin. XOS 2, it says, is lighter, stronger and faster than its predecessor, "yet it uses 50 per cent less power and its new design makes it more resistant to the environment". It's actually come up with two designs, one of which is strapped to the lower body and does away with the power cord. For proper heavy lifting - and back injuries are apparently a genuine problem for soldiers - the power cord remains, but the flexibility and power has been ramped up several-fold. "People wonder if I feel like Iron Man when I suit up," Raytheon Sarcos test engineer Rex Jameson said. "I can’t speak for Tony Stark, but when I’m in the suit I feel like me, only a faster, stronger version of me. "Given that his character lives in a California mansion and owns a stable of very fast race cars, that's probably as close as we'll come to a shared experience." Raytheon Sarcos vice president of Operations Dr Fraser Smith said that military interest in exoskeletons is at the stage where getting them deployed is "inevitable". "They are desperately needed," he said. "With a sustained commitment, they could be in place within five years."
  16. Surviving a DOS attack can be extremely difficult, the only way you can minimize a dos attack is having a very powerful hardware and some kind of load balancer in place, to reduce the load on the line.
  17. They will probably ask a set of questions: 1. What is Hak5 2. How did you come to know them 3. Do you have a Hak5 Member Account 4. Who Darren crew members are If you fail to answer the questions, you won't be able to use the Code Hak5
  18. It would've taken him a sometime to desigh the worm. You got to know how the system itself works, before attempting to create a worm. I guess it must have had inside help and as well as other worm writers to help him pull this attack.
  19. I haven't used neither of them, but Camtasia seems to be more professional, I like it better.
  20. Computerworld - Officials in Iran have confirmed that the Stuxnet worm infected at least 30,000 Windows PCs in the country, multiple Iranian news services reported on Saturday. Experts from Iran's Atomic Energy Organization also reportedly met this week to discuss how to remove the malware. Stuxnet, considered by many security researchers to be the most sophisticated malware ever, was first spotted in mid-June by VirusBlokAda, a little-known security firm based in Belarus. A month later Microsoft acknowledged that the worm targeted Windows PCs that managed large-scale industrial-control systems in manufacturing and utility companies. Those control systems, called SCADA, for "supervisory control and data acquisition," operate everything from power plants and factory machinery to oil pipelines and military installations. According to researchers with U.S.-based antivirus vendor Symantec, Iran was hardest hit by Stuxnet. Nearly 60% of all infected PCs in the earliest-known infection were located in that country. Since then, experts have amassed evidence that Stuxnet has been attacking SCADA systems since at least January 2010. Meanwhile, others have speculated that Stuxnet was created by a state-sponsored team of programmers, and designed to cripple Iran's Bushehr nuclear reactor. The reactor, located in southwestern Iran near the Persian Gulf, has been the focus of tension between Iran and the West, including the U.S., which believes that spent fuel from the reactor could be reprocessed into high-grade plutonium and used to build one or more nuclear weapons. According to the Tehran-based Mehr News Agency, Mahmoud Alyaie, an IT official with Iran's industries and mines ministry, said that 30,000 IP addresses in the country had been infected with Stuxnet. Multiple computers can access the Internet via a single IP address, so the total number of infected Windows PCs may be considerably larger. A working group composed of experts from several Iranian government ministries has been established to deal with the Stuxnet infection, Alyaie said. Other sources quoted by Mehr claimed that Iran has the capability to craft the necessary antivirus tools to detect and destroy the worm. Also on Saturday, the Associated Press (AP) news service said that experts from Iran's nuclear energy agency met last Tuesday to plan how to remove Stuxnet from infected PCs. Citing the ISNA news agency, another Tehran-based organization, the AP said no victimized plants or facilities had been named. Speculation about Stuxnet's likely target has focused on the Bushehr reactor. Saturday, the Web site of Iran's Atomic Energy Organization included a link to a lengthy Mehr story on Stuxnet. That story noted that government officials said that "serious damage that caused damage and disablement" had been reported to officials. Although Bushehr is not yet operational, workers began loading nuclear fuel into the reactor last month. Stuxnet, called "groundbreaking" by one analyst who pulled apart its code, used multiple unpatched, or "zero-day" vulnerabilities in Windows, relied on stolen digital certificates to disguise the malware, hid its code by using a rootkit, and reprogrammed PLC (programmable logic control) software to give new instructions to the machinery that software managed. Microsoft has patched two of the four zero-day vulnerabilities exploited by Stuxnet, and has promised to fix the remaining two flaws at some point. Source: http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/918...ustrial_systems
  21. "We’re not only focused on quickly resolving exploits when they surface but also on identifying possible vulnerabilities beforehand. This issue is now resolved." Good to know that, they were already on it and resolved in time. That's what make a good service provider.
  22. Have you tried using portableapps, I use it on my computer at home and my computer at home has limited access. With portable apps, you can have Firefox and Chrome but not IE. But you can still install other apps as well. And having them just running off your USB. I have also found this article, it may give you what you are after http://abhinavsingh.com/blog/2008/07/gain-...-guest-account/
  23. Get a small van vehicle and turn the back of it into a command center. Plenty of room to place hacking equipments, you could even mount a dish ontop.
  24. Since its a school computer, there is a good reason for it to be locked down. However you could use portableapps and install them onto your USB.
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