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Friday, January 28, 2011

(W) Chevy volt to have an IP address and allow connectivity

OK... Remind me to tell you about GM wanting to put Infotainment in your car... I have personal experience with GM and OnStar about this effort. GM wants WiFi since more programming time is needed than the production line can provide, so they ca fully program a car after it is complete, say in the parking lot... Add some music upload ability, sync with your home music library... Nothing could be possibly wrong with this... Or could there?


GM announced that the new all electric Volt will have an IP address for your convenience... Uhhh yeah.. Nothing could possibly go wrong with this... Here are some stats...

1. For every 1000 lines of code it is estimated that there is 1 security bug or vulnerability
2. For every 100,000 lines of code it is estimated there are 1 remote executable vulnerabilities
3. There will be 10,000,000 lines of software code in roughly 100 ECU's in the new Volt
4. Basic math tells us there should be about 100 remotely executable vulnerabilities available in the Volt..

May the Fun and Mayhem ensue... By Ne'er-Do-Wellers doing nefarious fun things..

Thanks to the PaulDotCom crew for the above stats...

PaulDotCom Podcast article

Article on the Volt

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Yubikey now does PayPay and eBay using OAuth




I can't say enough about my Yubikey 2nd factor authentication, but now Yubikey has a link to Symantec's VIP solution giving you secure login to EBay, PayPal and other websites.. ONLY $25.

Yubico Yubikey website

(U) Facebook adds HTTPS - secure session connection for all FB surfing




Maybe FireSheep helped convince Facebook to speed things up, but now all your Facebook surfing is protected With SSL, so no more private info in the clear that can be watched while you update your profile in a Starbucks.

Come on all you other FireSheep vulnerable apps.. Catch up already.

Read more here:

Facebook BLOG article

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

(U) Secunia PSI 2.0 released, supports auto-update of many apps




Per a previous Blog, Secunia's free Personal Software Inspector (PSI) has been updated to ver 2.0 and supports auto-updating of several popular applications to help keep your system up to date and thus secure

Secunia PSI website

#InfoSec #Secunia #Patch

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

2011 - Happy New Year Readers !!!!

Video Calls on the iPhone 4 and iPod Touch, WiFi & 3G




OK iPhone / iPod touch users, Skype now has an update so you can make Video Calls on your device over WiFi or 3G.

Now you can chat in person with your Hax0r buddies while doing research for educational purposes...

http://ping.fm/7TGQ8

#Skype VideoCall

(F) 'A Parents' Guide to Facebook (PDF)'




Happy New Year parents and anyone else using Facebook.. The folks that bring us ConnectSafely.org have published a PDF, free for the downloading 'A parents guide to Facebook' giving insight to children using FB and what a parent should do if their child is using or wants to use FB.

Good Info!!!!

link to 'A parents guide to Facebook'

Saturday, January 1, 2011

(F) Good Internet Monitoring software - Keep your kids safe




Safe Eyes $49/yr. is a good overall solution for Windows or Mac that allow you to monitor and block inappropriate content. Remember you can't always be watching your child when they surf the InterWebbings, but this software allows you to configure what you allow. If you want more than Norton Online family provides, this is the next step. Safe Eyes can block the following items, ore for Windows than Mac.

* Categories
* Clip by clip YouTube videos
* Downloads thru iTunes
* Social Networking - Block and record
* Instant Messaging - record both sides
* Gaming block
* Email contacts
* Time Limits
* Reporting and alerting
* IPod Touch and iPhone version too

Safe Eyes website

Top 5 Parental Control reviews


Friday, December 24, 2010

OK, this is just a serious kewl Do Dad for Vulnerable and Pen Tests




Feel free to send me one! The PlugBot is one clever idea. Just plug it into an outlet and let it connect WiFi or plug it into an Ethernet jack and let err rip....

Great idea to see if your organization can detect nefarious activity by unknown ne'er-do-wellers.
The PlugBot

Monday, December 20, 2010

(F) More on Passwords for websites




The recent Gawker password and account breach shows us that all these 'cloud' service sites like Gizmodo and Gawker Blog comment sites expose us if or when their security fails. Many websites like Gawker/Gizmodo where you have to register to leave a comment and be notified when someone comments on the same thread you did, leaves us with the question:

'How do we structure our passwords for the InterWebings'?

Users of the no longer optional Internet must have a set of rules that will allow you to use the Internet safely and able to withstand a major breach where our email address, which is our Internet login for most websites, along with our password has structure and rules we apply to keep us safe and isolate types of websites from others. If a breach occurs, like Gawker showed us, many other cloud sites like Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Yahoo and others locked all the accounts from the Gawker breach that match their users.

Why? Because too many of us use the same password for sites like Gawker for other sites like Facebook, Twitter and even our Banking. If you are one of these users, who have one password for every type of website, you ARE at extreme risk of getting your access compromised on other websites when a breach like Gawker occurs and why many websites locked your account if the emails used matched the Gawker breach list.

With this in mind... Let's craft some recommendations.

1. Create a formula for at least four (4) passwords for types of websites.
2. Use some type of password manager solution
3. Optimally use a password manager that you can use random passwords for eve website.

Four password formula:

Using of course a terrible example to make it easy to understand, let's say your password is, well 'password', something you should never use, but will work for the example. Minimum length is 8, the best length is 12 or more.

Password - easy for blogs and things you just don't care if it got breached
Passw0rd - you care a little more or some sites require 3 out of 4 items (upper, lower, number, special), not long enough
P@55w0rd - more secure using all items, but not long enough to be secure, use for Facebook or Twitter
S3(urep@55w0rd - Secure password as it is long and uses all items. Use this for financials or setup SuperGenPass or LastPass to generate one for you.

Of course having a different password for each website is best which you can get with SuperGenPass and LastPass that can generate a unique password for each website and all you have to remember is your long pass phrase instead of a bunch of passwords that are probably not that secure.

I recommend SuperGenPass and LastPass for truly secure, random and easy to remember passwords. Not to mention if a site got Gawked, LastPass let's me change the password quickly.

Thursday, December 16, 2010

(F) Kids and passwords... Adults too







Ever wonder what are children know about usernames and passwords? Who taught them! Did you as their parent provide them guidance and follow up with them to verify what and how they surf the InterWebbings?

You might be surprised that most children, Tweens and Teens use weak or no password at all. Actually close to 70% of children ( and yes many adults too) leave passwords that are not required to be changed 'blank' or something weak like their name or password1.



From ITickr.com

Random Password Statistics

Number of online accounts that an average user has: 25
Number of passwords that an average user has: 6.5
% of US consumers that use 1-2 password across all sites: 66%
Number of times an average user login per day: 8
Average password length: 8
Most commonly used password: password1
% of users that use personally meaningful words: 54.9%
% of users that use the ‘Remember my password’ function: 28.6%
% of users that write down their password: 15%
Average time users maintain the same password: 31 months.

The following image says it better than anything I will write in this Blog post!




So talk to your children about passwords and help them understand what makes a good password and how to protect it and use different passwords for different websites. Come up with a formula to use different passwords for email than you use for gaming sites, than you use for Facebook.

Use things like SuperGenPass or LastPass for more control and to help randomize your passwords.

If you use the same username (email address) which we generally have to on the Internet and you also use the same password on all your websites, when something like the Gawker breach occurs, all your logins are subject to being taken over by a person looking to steal information or worse, your financial or person information which can include your identity.

Don't get "Gawked"... Use different passwords for different websites.

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

(W) Warning for anyone that has a Gawker / LifeHacker account, your password has been stolen ,







For those that use and read any of the Gawker websites like one of my favorites LifeHacker, if you have an account to post comments or other login, your account password has been compromised!!!!

The websites affected include:

Lifehacker, Gizmodo, Gawker, Jezebel, io9, Jalopnik, Kotaku, Deadspin and Fleshbot.

The threat?

Many people, i'm not one of them, use the same password for multiple website accounts, yes we call this 'The Cloud'. This means if you use the same password for a Gawker website as your Facebook or Twitter account... The bad guys are already logging into to these stolen accounts and trying to steal or gain data from your other sites and accounts that you used the same password for.

How do I avoid this threat?

My last post was on passwords and either SuperGenPass or LastPass have a random generator that allows each website to have a unique password and you only have to remember your main passphrase which either generates the real password (SuperGenPass) or enters the remembered password like LastPass.

How do I know if I have a Gawker account?

The are a couple websites that allow you to lookup your Email that was used as your account and see if Gawker reports it. If your email address does show up, your password and Gawker account are now well know to the Ne'er-do-wellers and no longer under your control or private.

Look them up now !!!

ComputerWorld article with instructions

Slate website with simple email address check

Saturday, December 11, 2010

(F)(U) Best bookmark sync tool now with best password management tool

I could not be happier to read that the best Tool to synchronize bookmarks was acquired by the best tool to manage passwords.



Xmarks is an Add-On for FireFox, Chrome, IE and Safari that allows you to use one browser on one PC or Mac, add a bookmark and then go to a different PC or Mac, yes iPad too and see the synchronized bookmarks. Now any browser you use will have all your bookmarks in sync. Also it is the best way to backup your bookmarks if you get a new system or have to rebuild your computer, the power of the cloud will store your bookmarks on the Xmarks server, which also allows you to access your bookmarks from any computer, say your friends, work or parents system. You just login to your Xmarks account and poof.. There are all your bookmarks. Xmarks synchronizes your bookmarks each time you open or close your browser or as needed. Xmarks also lets you save your passwords for logins, but they are not stored as secure as I would like them to be. The only issue with Xmarks is the lack of encryption at rest, on the Xmarks server and options to additionally secure them with two-factor authentication.


LastPass is a tool that is used to save and store all your website logins and also secure notes. Browser based Add-on as well and iDevice too, LastPass encrypts your password file locally with AES 256 encryption, so as good as it gets as well as stores them on the LastPass server, yup, the cloud, again with AES 256 encryption. So if some Ne'er-do-well breaks into the LastPass cloud servers, they would only get encrypted data that is worthless without the master password only you have.


In addition, you can add, yet another best thing, a Yubikey to add a 2nd factor 'something I have' token that you plug into your USB and touch to add a one-time and/or static password option for $25 USD that now protects your website logins and passwords with not only your username and password, but with the option of 2 factor authentication with a Yubikey, which of course I use to protect my website logins...

With LastPass acquiring Xmarks, this means we will now have a bookmark sync tool that now stores your bookmarks securely, very secure with AES 256 and with Yubikey as an option, your bookmarks, usernames, passwords and secure notes will all now be securely stored locally and in 'the cloud'.

Xmarks website

LastPass website

Yubikey website

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

(W) Use your browser to store passwords? Bad surfer bad...






If you didn't already know why you should NEVER use your browsers "remember passwords" option, tools like this are why... Store your password in a browser, get it broken and stolen by a tool like this, and no, a ne'er-do-well would do it from a java script on a website you visit.

http://ping.fm/he7kd

Use something more secure like LastPass or SuperGenPass...


Monday, November 22, 2010

These lads look awfully young to be 'WANTED'....







Care to guess what they are wanted for ? Would you have trusted them ?

(W) Warning Will Robinson... Adobe 10 Email is malware







If you get or see an email, post or other add for Adobe 10 - ignore it, it WILL BE MALWARE!!!!

Go to Adobe.com directly if you want to check for an update, or use Secunia PSI.

SANS article on the Adobe SPAM

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Good source for InfoSec Podcasts




Thank you IronGeek for listing the more popular InfoSec Podcasts. I would add Steve Gibson's 'Security Now' for general IT folks and anyone wanting a good basic InfoSec update Podcast.

http://ping.fm/P46EW



Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Top Ten Opensource Security and Network tools




Some well known, new and forgotten FREE Opensource InfoSec and Network tools for the budget minded.

Thank you Dark Reading...

http://ping.fm/0ykRI

#11... custom scripts...

Sunday, November 7, 2010

(C) Two first time InfoSec Conferences in Austin & Houston ROCKED!!!!




In the last week I attended two first time InfoSec conferences, LasCon focused at Web Application Security and HouSecCon which combined hacking and general InfoSec presentations.

For a first time conference LasCon rocked, not just for the kewl LA Police Gear bag, but it was organized well and most the presentations were very good. I especially liked "How I met your girlfriend" by Samy Kamkar of MySpace worm and Evercookie fame, but also a very kewl example of using Facebook chat times and a Geo location hack to actually get information enough to meet, say, your girlfriend knowing when you are not with her...


At HouSecCon, MJ Keith gave a presentation on Android phone hacking and how the business contact App Bump can be used to steal info and generally do nefarious activity.

Of course there were other talks and conversation with several seasoned InfoSec professionals I know or just met, but all in all, they were great one day events.

Put these two conferences on your list as MUST attend for next year!!!!

There is a new paradigm shift (Yes I used it) in InfoSec conferences with one or two day inexpensive conferences (under $100) that are ruling the InfoSec conference circuit. Why? Because as InfoSec professionals, we have an obligation to train and educate in order to improve information security, not just make profit, which there is plenty of. B-Sides is another conference that was this weekend in Dallas that I tried to virtually attend via MS Live, but alas.. The audio did not work... ;-(

I am part of the Austin B-Sides March 2011 conference planning because I believe in this new InfoSec 1-2 day cheap to free mentality to promote InfoSec for everyone, not just those with budget to attend BlackHat, SANS, RSA or CSI events..

Watch my Blog for more on Austin B-Sides 2011, it WILL be a killer event !!! And just before South by Southwest Interactive week!!!!


Two new browsers for you to consider...




So we have two new browsers designed more for social networking than typical browsing. Both these browsers are based on Chromium, so expect speed for video and pictures.

Will these be more or less secure for surfing social sites like Facebook, Twitter, Flicker and others? Time will tell...
RockMelt website



Flock website

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

(U) SANS botched this one...




I usually agree with SANS, but they missed the #1 preventative item and that is REMOVE ADMINISTRATIVE access of the user!!!! This will cut your risk 90% give or take. Also AV will not help you from 0-Day events... Not being a local Admin will.

Start - Control Panel - Users - Create New User, make it STANDARD USER - set a good password.

Logoff, logon as is user and never use an Administrative account unless you are doing updates.

Surfing and Emailing as a Standard User will protect you more than anything else... Ohh and of course DON'T CLICK ON THAT !!!!

http://isc.sans.org/diary.html?storyid=9880

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

(F) Catch me on The InfoSec Daily Podcast, discussing compliance, Don't click on that, local administrator and other Infosec shutoff




Catch me chatting with Rick Hayes and Keith Pachulski on the "InfoSec Daily Podcast" Episode 248 - discussing PCI, compliance, Security Awareness, 'Don't click on THAT!!!' presentation, local administrator accounts and other shtuff... on iTunes:
Link to iTunes
or their website via MP3 download:
ISDPodcast website

Monday, November 1, 2010

Achieving Compliance Daily - my perspective on achieving compliance




Read my article in the November 2011 ISSA Journal on how to achieve compliance daily. Basically, spend the effort on obtaining compliance on actually improving your InfoSec program and by default you will be compliant.

Sunday, October 31, 2010

(W) (F) Warning all public WiFi users... Home users too.. FireSheep arrives and Grandma can hack your accounts via WiFi







A game changing tool was released this week that will result in a significant change in WiFi security. How?, Why?...

FireSheep, an add-on for FireFox, Windows users will need WinPcap installed, Mac users are ready to go, Linux is coming... (FireSheep website)

FireSheep takes advantage of the way websites make session cookies that keep track of who and where you are when surfing the InterWebbings over WiFi... And NOT encrypted after you logon via HTTPS... So yes, HTTPS will NOT protect you from this vulnerability. I have tried it and 'ZOIKS Scooby Doo !!!!' I so can Pown your account over open WiFi...

A simple Add-On for FireFox that you just have to press 'Start Collecting' and after a short time, 'Stop Collecting' and you will see icons for all the FaceBook, Twitter, Yelp, DropBox, etc. Sites that people visited while on the same WiFi network like, say ... Starbucks, the Airport, or yes.. Your home, so your neighbors...

Now this only works over OPEN WiFi and not WiFi secured with WPA or WPA2 preferably.

I was at a Starbucks near the first LASCON Web App Security Con Friday and told this info to a visiting manager that was in the location recording with a webcam the art of space planning so we can get served quickly.. I informed him of this and told him to check my Blog... Hopefully companies like Starbucks get this and fast or users will have their accounts 'popped' as we call it, quickly.

If you want to protect yourself and you are a WiFi HotSpot like Starbucks, then all you need to do is have a WPA2 WiFi Key and make it obvious, like Starbucks or FREE. It does not have to be unique, just set to something everyone knows so it is still easy for your users to remember or your family to remember, but you MUST setup a WPA Key to beat FireSheep.

So what can I do if I hijack your session? post a Malware link as you, change your password, steal any data I choose, send a message to your girlfriend to meet you, or really... ME ( Hey Samy.. Add this to your presentation) and steal your files, login info and anything else in the list of websites seen in the image... And MORE sites coming !!!!

Let me know what you think... Send me an email.
#Security #FireSheep



5 Stages of vulnerability management...




If you don't have a vulnerability management program, you should. This article is a good example of the five stages you would go through (denial - acceptance) if you don't think you need to have or improve your program.

http://ping.fm/R6Iml