Woah, Stuxnet
Impressive.
Bytes that get stuck in your teeth.
Impressive.
A useful service for improving the security of your users’ accounts.
Ryan Kazanciyan:
I’ve been waiting eagerly for this episode to air — it’s my favorite of the season. As I looked through my notes, I was surprised to find that Kor and I first started working on scenes for “eps3.4_runtime-err0r.r00” as far back as January. The attacks against E Corp’s Hardware Security Modules (HSMs) are among the most complex hacks we’ve depicted on the show
An algorithm for splitting and sharing secrets.
Cogent and clear advice.
UpGuard has discovered an open database containing information on what appear to be approximately 198 million American voters left misconfigured by a GOP analytics firm.
I feel like we’ll be needing more and more of these.
Julia Evans:
in this post we will dissect an SSL certificate and try to understand it!
A guide.
Learnings from about 300 hours spent responding to security incidents and data breaches.
A nice broad coverage of the topic.
For the security conscious and paranoid.
Decent coverage of private and public subnets, NATs, and Internet gateways.
A nice run down of how SSL/TLS works and its vulnerabilities.
Recycle your infrastructure frequently to minimise security holes.