<![CDATA[Gizmodo: defcon]]> http://tags.gizmodo.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gizmodo.com.png <![CDATA[Gizmodo: defcon]]> http://gizmodo.com/tag/defcon http://gizmodo.com/tag/defcon <![CDATA[Warning: Not All ATMs at DefCon Are What They Appear to Be]]> The infamous DefCon hackers convention is going on in Las Vegas right now. And, just a word of advice. If you're going to visit, grab your cash before entering the conference.

This completely fake ATM, equipped to skim debit cards, was discovered in the Riviera Hotel Casino right outside the hotel's security office. Conveniently, it also happened to be right out of the line of sight of surveillance cameras.

Whether the kiosk was merely a DefCon prank or a serious and malicious attempt to steal bank account information is unknown. But not having been suckered myself, I'll admit that the ATM prop is at least a little funny. And if there were a little man inside just nabbing people's debit cards, it would have been even funnier. [Wired via CrunchGear]

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<![CDATA[DefCon Badge Hack Fools Facial Recognition Systems With Pulsing Light]]> DefCon's badges encourage hacking. In fact, the best hacks at the conference receive a black über badge signifying free lifetime admission. But why compete for the über badges when you can use steal them with this year's winning hack?

You have to hand it to the guy behind this DefCon 17's winning badge hack. He really wanted one of those black über badges and figured out how to get it, one way or the other. While it may look like one of those tacky Mickey's Christmas Parade hats sold at Disney, the pulsing series of LEDs embedded in the bill of the cap confuses facial recognition systems. We'll never know whether his design would've truly allowed the guy to sneak into the room where the badges are stored or not, but it's quite an achievement to make a cat burglar's dream toy out of these badges:

While this kills that old 100% accuracy claim regarding facial recognition,there aren't any details about how the hack is meant to thwart facial recognition systems. Does it have to do with how 3D images are analyzed? Does anyone have any insight? Specs? Cookies of your choice to whoever satisfies my curiosity on this topic. [Wired]

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<![CDATA[Obama Administration Adds Renowned Hacker to Homeland Security Advisory Council]]> Jeff Moss, who you may know as the founder of the hacking conference DefCon, was sworn in yesterday as one of the new members of the Homeland Security Advisory Council. And we think it's a shrewd and thoughtful move.

Moss, also known as Dark Tangent, founded both the DefCon and Black Hat hacker conferences in addition to legit security work—most notably at Ernst and Young, one of those giant corporations that provides auditors, attorneys, brokers, designers, and lots more to other companies. He's a sort of godfather of hackers, a pioneer who uses his underground skills in mostly above-ground ways.

As the Obama administration has been placing a heavier focus on cybersecurity, it's an extremely smart move to ask one of the world's foremost professional hackers to assist on the Department of Homeland Security Advisory Council. He's got enough expertise to really be able to offer some help, but he's also not a dangerous hacker—one analyst called him "as corporate as hiring someone out of Microsoft," meaning that for the hacking world, Moss is hardly a loose cannon. But that's exactly why it's also a smart political choice. Picking a hacker seems like an edgy choice, but Moss is a guy who's worked for Fortune 500 companies, not someone who's working in his basement to bring down the power grid.

We're looking forward to seeing cybersecurity finally advance, and this kind of guy is just what we need to get ourselves back on track. [CNET]

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<![CDATA[A Look Inside Defcon's Network Ops Room, The Most Secure Conference Wi-Fi You'll Ever See]]> Network access at conferences sucks, pretty much without exception. That is, unless it's built by the badge-wearing network ops volunteers of the Defcon hacker convention, who are affectionately referred to as the "Goons" (read: IT badasses). Wired's Threat Level got a chance to look behind the scenes and snap some great photos of the network gear (and chain link fences, and padlocks, and German Shepherds) that make the Defcon network the fortress that it needs to be to keep a network full of hackers from tearing each other apart.

A Cisco fiber switch (top) handles all of the traffic on the 20 megabit internet link, and the whole thing runs behind an OpenBSD firewall. Around 40 Aruba AP-70 access points distribute the network, which are basically only radios hooked to AC power; they receive all configuration info from the main network system to prevent WAP takeovers:

The whole thing sits behind this padlocked chain fence, which is manned by a 24/7 armed security guard.

Hit up Threat Level for the full set, including a portrait of Tomoe the German Shepherd, the Goons' last line of defense. [Threat Level photos by Dave Bullock via /.]

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<![CDATA[Medeco High Security M3 Locks Hacked With Easy Credit Card Trick]]> With all the hacks going on this weekend at DefCon, the world's largest annual hacker convention, perhaps the most embarrassingly easy to crack was Medeco's high-security locks. According to a group of security researchers, all you need to get into an Medeco M3 lock, used in sensitive facilities such as the White House and the Pentagon, is a low-res image of someone's key and a credit card.

The researchers took a photograph of a Medeco key, printed the image onto a label and used the label as a cut-out guide for reshaping the plastic of the credit card. Voila; State secrets here we come! Any credit card plastic could be used to create a simulated key, they said.

The Medeco M3 key does have an extra feature that is supposed to add security – a step protrusion on one side of the key that helps moves the Medeco lock's slider. But the same crew that created this easy hack proved last year that all you needed to do was insert the end of a bent paper clip into lock, pushing back the slider and rendering the feature toothless. Considering Medeco locks are three to four times more expensive than conventional ones, maybe the company should jump on this problem stat. [Wired - Photo Credit: Dave Bullock]

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<![CDATA[Wired Previews Hackable Defcon 16 Badge]]> Wired got a sneak peek at one of the more fun aspects of this coming weekend's Defcon, the hackable badge. Last year's badge was hacked in just ten minutes, but it didn't have an SD card slot at USB support. The new card has fewer features than last year's but is more powerful. And it comes with a longer battery life, good news. But not everything is known, and that's kind of the point to these fun trinkets. [Wired]

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<![CDATA[NBC's DefCon Mole - The Walk of Shame]]> Reading the story about NBC's undercover reporter getting ousted from hacker convention DefCon was enjoyable. Watching the video...that's something really special. Here's the whole story, from beginning to end.


My favorite moment: a heckler says, "You must feel like Lindsey Lohan right now."

My second favorite moment: the geek giggling at the end.

[via boingboing]

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<![CDATA[DefCon Badge Hacked in 10 Minutes]]> Now, now, don't get too excited. Creator Joe Grand designed it to be hacked. Still, 10 minutes is a pretty respectable time for the soldering, reprogramming and reflashing job done by Dave Bullock, Wired's photographer at the event. The badge features an LED display with scrolling text, and it even has an easter egg (typing in 31337 outputs "$kingpin$", the board maker's handle.) Dave hacked the press badge, but the badge shown is an Uber Badge, Joe Grand's, actually. They're given away as prizes at DefCon, and are lifetime passes to DefCon. [Wired, but beautiful photos from Dave]
Dave writes to correct:

I should point out that the badge that was hacked was actually my press badge, and that uber badge shown is Joe Grand's (badge designer) personal badge. Those black badges are given away as prizes for various defcon activities and provide the recipient with a lifetime free pass to defcon.
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<![CDATA[NBC's DefCon Mole Outed, Stalked by Hackers and Press]]> Michelle Madigan, Dateline NBC's DefCon mole, armed with hidden camera, was trying to sneak in as a programmer and tape hackers admitting to illegal activity. Instead, DefCon's NBC mole uncovered the plot.

DefCon staff lured her to a large hall telling her that the Spot the Fed contest was in session and that she could get a picture of an undercover federal agent at the contest. When she sat down, Jeff Moss, DefCon's founder, announced that they were changing the game. Instead of Spot the Fed, they were going to play Spot the Undercover Reporter and then announced, "And there's one in here right now." Madigan, realizing she'd been had, jumped from her seat and bolted out the door with reporters carrying cameras chasing after her through the parking lot and to her car.
(Journalists at DefCon have to comply by strict rules of engagement not to be dirty snitches.) *checking photo* Yea, she doesn't stick out at all.

Madigan was last seen being chased by two dozen reporters hoping to interview her. Press eating the press. [Wired, gorgeous photos via Dave Bullock]

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