
Security, Spoken
2,086 episodes — Page 37 of 42

'Olympic Destroyer' Malware Hit Pyeongchang Ahead of Opening Ceremony
Russian hackers, with hardly a shred of deniability, have targeted the Pyeongchang Olympics for months in retaliation for the country's doping ban, stealing and leaking documents from Olympics-related organizations. Now a more insidious attack has surfaced, one designed not to merely embarrass, but disrupt the opening ceremonies themselves. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Amino Apps Makes the Case for Anonymity Online
Over the last several years, a number of social media and dating platforms have begun emphasizing users’ real names. Facebook started requiring people sign up with their “authentic” names in 2014. Twitter invited anyone to apply to be “verified”—meaning Twitter certified they were who they claimed—in 2016. In December, OkCupid said it would no longer allow prospective daters to use names like “sexgirl_420. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Security News This Week: An Apple Employee Leaked a Major Chunk of iOS Source Code
This week may have been, perhaps, the closest thing the cybersecurity world can experience to a lull in the digital mayhem. With the exception of one very significant Apple leak—and we'll get to that—hackers kept their breaches, disruptions, and scams close to the baseline. At least, that we know of. One of the most significant news stories of the week was, in fact, a massive law enforcement takedown. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Snap Map Will Now Live Outside Snapchat
When Hurricane Harvey wreaked destruction in Houston last August, the country turned not just to cable television, but also to Snapchat. Two months before the storm, the social media app had debuted Snap Map, a crowdsourced, interactive feature that displays what’s happening on Snapchat around the world. At launch, Snap Map seemed mostly like a fun toy, albeit one with potential privacy implications; Snap Map can broadcast your location to your friends if you opt in. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Time's Just About Up to Secure the 2018 Midterm Elections
It's been roughly two years since the first signs that Russia had launched an interference campaign aimed at the 2016 presidential race, and now the United States is hurtling toward a set of pivotal midterm elections in November. But while some states have made an earnest effort to secure the vote, the overall landscape looks troubling—and in some cases, it's too late to fix it this year. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

This AI Reads Privacy Policies So You Don't Have To
You don't read privacy policies. And of course, that's because they're not actually written for you, or any of the other billions of people who click to agree to their inscrutable legalese. Instead, like bad poetry and teenagers' diaries, those millions upon millions of words are produced for the benefit of their authors, not readers—the lawyers who wrote those get-out clauses to protect their Silicon Valley employers. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Feds Take Down a Half-Billion Dollar Cybercrime Forum After 7 Years Online
With the rise and fall of dark web black markets like Alphabay and the Silk Road, law enforcement officials have repeatedly warned that even anonymity tools like Tor and cryptocurrencies won't hide criminals from the law's long reach. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Scammers Are Stealing Bitcoin on Twitter With a Classic Scheme
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Bob Mueller’s Investigation Is Larger—and Further Along—Than You Think
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Security News This Week: 'AutoSploit' Tool Makes Unskilled Hacking Easier Than Ever
Another week, another death by a thousand leaks, from the operational security failure of fitness app Strava exposing the locations of military bases around the world to Russian hacker group Fancy Bear dropping the latest round of stolen documents from Olympics-related organizations. And then there was that other, congressionally orchestrated release of a certain classified memo, a highly politicized move whose importance security experts are still debating. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Reading Between the Lines of the Devin Nunes Memo
After weeks of Twitter users demanding Congress #ReleaseTheMemo, the House Intelligence Committee, chaired by Republican Devin Nunes, disclosed the contentious four-page report to the public Friday, after President Donald Trump signed off on its release. And while, as expected, the document alleges that federal law enforcement officials abused their surveillance powers in investigating the Trump campaign's ties to Russia, national security experts see something very different. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Here’s What Happens If ‘Magnificent Bastard’ Mueller Gets Fired
Bob Mueller is famously nonchalant amid life’s toughest moments. Much of that public calm stems from the fact that he’s a Magnificent Bastard and, specifically, the lessons of December 11, 1968. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Hackers Have Already Targeted the Winter Olympics—And May Not Be Done
The Olympics have always been a geopolitical microcosm: beyond the athletic match-ups, they provide a vehicle for diplomacy and propaganda, and even, occasionally, a proxy for war. It stands to reason, then, that in 2018 they've also become a nexus of hacker skullduggery. The Olympics unfolding next week in Pyeongchang may already be the most thoroughly hacked in the games' history—with potentially more surprises to come. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

A Devastating ATM Hack Swept the World—And Finally Hit the US
In July 2016, ATM hackers in Taiwan raked in more than $2 million using a new type of malware attack that manipulated machines into spitting out tons of cash. The method, dubbed "jackpotting," quickly spread across parts of Asia, Europe, and Central America, resulting in tens of millions of dollars of stolen cash. By November 2016, the FBI issued a warning that "well-resourced and organized malicious cyber actors have intentions to target the US financial sector” using this approach. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Cryptocurrency Scams Are Just Straight-Up Trolling at This Point
Facebook announced in a blog post Tuesday that it would ban cryptocurrency advertising from the platform entirely. The company said that many ads for cryptocurrency investment opportunities, like initial coin offerings, were “not currently operating in good faith.” Facebook has a point. Take Prodeum for example, a Lithuanian cryptocurrency startup that appeared online Thursday. By Monday, it was gone. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

The Strava Heat Map and the End of Secrets
A modern equivalent of the World War II era warning that “loose lips sink ships” may be “FFS don’t share your Fitbit data on duty.” Over the weekend, researchers and journalists raised the alarm about how anyone can identify secretive military bases and patrol routes based on public data shared by a “social network for athletes” called Strava. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Look Out: Chrome Extension Malware Has Evolved
You already know to be wary of third-party Android apps, and even to watch your back in the Google Play Store. A flashlight app with only 12 reviews might be hiding some malware as well. But your hyper-vigilant download habits should extend beyond your smartphone. You need to keep an eye on your desktop Chrome extensions as well. These handy little applets give you seamless access to services like Evernote or password managers, or put your Bitmoji just a click away. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Security News This Week: Dutch Spies Snooped on Russia's Elite Hackers
This week’s security news featured a healthy blend of politics, hacks, and the looming threat of apocalypse. What more could one hope for! The Doomsday Clock, which the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists uses to measure how close humanity sits to its own destruction, ticked 30 seconds closer to midnight this week. We’re now at two minutes to doom, the closest we’ve been in decades. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Mueller's Team Has Interviewed Facebook Staff as Part of Russia Probe
The Department of Justice's special counsel Robert Mueller and his office have interviewed at least one member of Facebook's team that was associated with President Trump's 2016 presidential campaign, according to a person familiar with the matter. The interview was part of Mueller's probe into Russian interference in the 2016 election and what role, if any, the Trump campaign played in that interference. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Your Sloppy Bitcoin Drug Deals Will Haunt You For Years
Perhaps you bought some illegal narcotics on the Silk Road half a decade ago, back when that digital black market for every contraband imaginable was still online and bustling. You might already regret that decision, for any number of reasons. After all, the four bitcoins you spent on that bag of hallucinogenic mushrooms would now be worth about as much as an Alfa Romeo. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

The DNC’s New Chief Security Officer Knows All About Crisis
The Democratic National Committee has hired Bob Lord, most recently Yahoo's head of information security, to be its chief security officer—a brand new position, created in the aftermath of the historic hack by Russian operatives of the DNC's servers during the 2016 presidential campaign. This is Lord's first foray into the world of politics, having spent his career in Silicon Valley working at companies like Twitter, AOL, and Netscape. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Closer to Midnight: The Doomsday Clock and the Threat of Nuclear War
The accidental missile alert in Hawaii earlier this month made real for 38 terrifying minutes the vague, low-level dread that permeates American life today: Nuclear war seems closer and more real than it has in a generation. Even the pope—not exactly a fear-monger—said last week that the world now stood at “the very limit. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

The Cynical Misdirection Behind #ReleaseTheMemo
“EXCLUSIVE: Infowars has obtained and is now releasing the secret FISA memo,” conspiracy theorist Alex Jones blared on Twitter Tuesday. Jones thought he had a mysterious four-page document authored by Republican Congressman Devin Nunes, who leads the House Intelligence Committee. The memo purportedly proves that intelligence officials abused surveillance powers authorized under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act in investigating Trump’s campaign ties to Russia. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Meltdown and Spectre Patching Has Been a Total Train Wreck
The Meltdown and Spectre vulnerabilities, first revealed at the beginning of the year, affect pretty much anything with a chip in it. That ubiquity has made the process of releasing patches understandably arduous. Every type of impacted hardware and software requires its own specially tailored solution, and even a fix that works as intended may slow down system processes as a side effect. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Tinder's Lack of Encryption Lets Strangers Spy on Your Swipes
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Pixek App Encrypts Your Photos From Camera to Cloud
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Android Users: To Avoid Malware, Ditch Google’s App Store
In the early days of Android, co-founder Andy Rubin set the stage for the fledgling mobile operating system. Android’s mission was to create smarter mobile devices, ones that were more aware of their owner’s behavior and location.“If people are smart,” Rubin told Business Week in 2003, “that information starts getting aggregated into consumer products. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Security News This Week: Hacking Group's Mobile Malware Spies on Thousands Worldwide
This week, Hawaii reeled after an emergency text alert about an impending nuclear missile attack triggered panic—and then turned out to be a false alarm. Researchers provided more details about the sophisticated Triton malware that targets industrial control systems and impacted a real-world plant last year. The anti-fascist far-left movement known as Antifa gets some of its intelligence from a computer scientist named Megan Squire, who disseminates valuable and controversial information. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Menacing Malware Shows the Dangers of Industrial System Sabotage
A recent digital attack on the control systems of an industrial plant has renewed concerns about the threat hacking poses to critical infrastructure. And while security researchers offered some analysis last month of the malware used in the attack, called Triton or Trisis, newly revealed details of how it works expose just how vulnerable industrial plants—and their failsafe mechanisms—could be to manipulation. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

A New Way to Track Down Bugs Could Help Save IoT
On a clear day this summer, security researcher Ang Cui boarded a boat headed to a government biosafety facility off the northeastern tip of Long Island. Cui's security company, Red Balloon, will spend the next year studying how its Internet of Things threat-scanning tool performs on the building control systems of Plum Island Animal Disease Center. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Crime-Predicting Algorithms May Not Fare Much Better Than Untrained Humans
The American criminal justice system couldn’t get much less fair. Across the country, some 1.5 million people are locked up in state and federal prisons. More than 600,000 people, the vast majority of whom have yet to be convicted of a crime, sit behind bars in local jails. Black people make up 40 percent of those incarcerated, despite accounting for just 13 percent of the US population. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Tech Companies Are Complicit in Censoring Iran Protests
The world is witnessing the biggest protest movement in Iran since the 2009 Green Movement uprising. Over the last two weeks, there has been unrest in nearly every major Iranian city and dozens of smaller towns. Corruption, economic mismanagement, and neglect are the protesters’ primary grievances, though the chants quickly turned political. Predictably, the government has cracked down: More than 32 people have been killed and at least 3,700 have been detained since the protests began. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Congress Renews Warrantless Surveillance—And Makes It Even Worse
In 2013, Edward Snowden revealed that the National Security Agency was legally collecting millions of Americans’ phone calls and electronic communications—including emails, Facebook messages, and browsing histories—without a warrant. Congress has now decided not only to reauthorize these programs, but also to expand some of their most invasive techniques. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

The Astrophysicist Who Wants to Help Solve Baltimore's Urban Blight
Vacant buildings have their own sort of gravitational pull. When a home gets boarded up on one block, you can almost bet another will follow nearby. Often, they pull whole neighborhoods into their orbit, driving down the local housing market in ever-expanding clusters. Which at least begins to explain why Baltimore has tapped Tamás Budavári, an astrophysicist at Johns Hopkins University, to study their patterns. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Security News This Week: Google Pulls 60 Malicious Apps With Millions of Downloads from Play Store
The fallout of the widespread Meltdown and Spectre processor vulnerabilities continued this week. WIRED took an in-depth look at the parallel sagas that caused four research teams to independently discover the bugs within months of each other. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

How Hawaii Could Have Sent a False Nuclear Alarm
As the citizens of Hawaii came out of hiding in their bathtubs and basements Saturday morning, after learning that the emergency alert they had received, warning of an imminent nuclear missile attack, was a false alarm, their fear and panic transformed into rage. "I'm extremely angry right now. People should lose their jobs if this was an error," Hawaii State Representative Matt Lopresti told CNN. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

The Hidden Toll of Fixing Meltdown and Spectre
In the early days of 2018, the engineering team at the mobile services company Branch noticed slowdowns and errors with its Amazon Web Services cloud servers. An unexpected round of AWS server reboots in December had already struck Ian Chan, Branch's director of engineering, as odd. But the server slowdowns a few weeks later presented a more pressing concern. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

A Clever Radio Trick Can Tell If a Drone Is Watching You
As flying, camera-wielding machines get ever cheaper and more ubiquitous, inventors of anti-drone technologies are marketing every possible idea for protection from hovering eyes in the sky: Drone-spotting radar. Drone-snagging shotgun shells. Anti-drone lasers, falcons, even drone-downing drones. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Skype's Rolling Out End-to-End Encryption For Hundreds of Millions of People
Skype has more than 300 million monthly users, making it one of the most popular chat platforms in the world. Now, they'll all be able to benefit from a crucial privacy protection: Microsoft announced Thursday that Skype will offer end-to-end encryption for audio calls, text, and multimedia messages through a feature called Private Conversations. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Hack Brief: Russian Hackers Release Apparent IOC Emails in Wake of Olympics Ban
On Wednesday, in the wake of Russia's December ban from the 2018 Winter Olympics, a Russia-linked group calling itself "Fancy Bears" published a set of apparently stolen emails. They purportedly belong to officials from the International Olympic Committee, the United States Olympic Committee, and third-party groups associated with the organizations. It's not the first time Russia has lashed out at the IOC and the anti-doping agencies in the last few years. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

WhatsApp Security Flaws Could Allow Snoops to Slide Into Group Chats
When WhatsApp added end-to-end encryption to every conversation for its billion users two years ago, the mobile messaging giant significantly raised the bar for the privacy of digital communications worldwide. But one of the tricky elements of encryption—and even trickier in a group chat setting—has always been ensuring that a secure conversation reaches only the intended audience, rather than some impostor or infiltrator. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

How the Government Hides Secret Surveillance Programs
In 2013, 18-year-old Tadrae McKenzie robbed a marijuana dealer for $130 worth of pot at a local Taco Bell in Tallahassee, Florida. He and two friends had used BB guns to carry out the crime, which under Florida law constituted robbery with a deadly weapon. McKenzie braced himself to serve the minimum four years in prison. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Meltdown and Spectre Fixes Arrive—But Don't Solve Everything
This week, a pair of vulnerabilities broke basic security for practically all computers. That's not an overstatement. Revelations about Meltdown and Spectre have wreaked digital havoc and left a critical mass of confusion in their wake. Not only are they terrifically complex vulnerabilities, the fixes that do exist have come in patchwork fashion. With most computing devices made in the last two decades at risk, it's worth taking stock of how the clean-up efforts are going. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Pop-Up Mobile Ads Surge as Sites Scramble to Stop Them
Ads that automatically redirect you from your daily browsing to a flashy sweepstakes have long been an incredibly annoying facet of the internet. But the versions that have evolved on the mobile web are particularly vexing, because they can trap you with a pop-up "notification" and nowhere to go. And a recent surge in these mobile pop-ups, even on reputable sites, has left people more frustrated than ever. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Triple Meltdown: How So Many Researchers Found a 20-Year-Old Chip Flaw At the Same Time
On a cold Sunday early last month in the small Austrian city of Graz, three young researchers sat down in front of the computers in their homes, and tried to break their most fundamental security protections. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Security Roundup: White House Staffers Can't Use Personal Smartphones Anymore
It’s not every week that you have a once-in-a-generation security disaster. You know, definitionally. So let’s lead off with Meltdown and Spectre, a pair of attacks that impacts the processors inside most computers today. It’s quite a mess! While technically complicated, Meltdown and Spectre are best understood in terms of scale. Every Intel processor since 1995 is impacted, along with AMD and ARM-based chips. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Pro-Russia Twitter Trolls Take Aim at Special Counsel Robert Mueller
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What Would Really Happen If Russia Attacked Undersea Internet Cables
It might seem like nightmare scenario. A terrorist organization or nefarious nation state decides to derail the global internet by faulting the undersea fiber optic cables that connect the world. These cables, which run along the ocean floor, carry almost all transoceanic digital communication, allowing you to send a Facebook message to a friend in Dubai, or receive an email from your cousin in Australia. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

A Dead-Simple Algorithm Reveals the True Toll of Voter ID Laws
Ever since the Supreme Court struck down a key part of the Voting Rights Act in 2013, laws requiring voters to show identification when they vote have speckled the nation, popping up in states from Rhode Island to Arizona. Almost as quickly, voting rights advocates have taken states like Texas and Alabama to court, arguing that these laws intentionally discriminate against minority voters. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Get a Password Manager. No More Excuses
You're sick of hearing this. The exhortations didn't work in 2013 and they're not going to work now. Sure. But the truth is that you need a password manager, and it's worth it to take the time to set one up. At this point, even their shortcomings prove how vital they are. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices