- Slides from the Jay Beale and Larry Pesce talk “Phishing without Failure and Frustration” are up here at the InGuardians website.
- At the same site, a talk Jay Beale gave in the Packet Capture Village, “Adding Ramparts to Your Bastille: An Introduction to SELinux Hardening”.
- Slides for Max Bazaliy‘s “A Journey Through Exploit Mitigation Techniques in iOS” are here.
- Haven’t found slides yet, but the tools from Salvador Mendoza’s “Samsung Pay: Tokenized Numbers, Flaws and Issues” are here.
- Patrick Wardle‘s “I’ve got 99 Problems, but Little Snitch ain’t one” slides are here.
Archive for August 8th, 2016
DEFCON 24 updates: August 8, 2016.
Monday, August 8th, 2016Torn from the pages of the NYT.
Monday, August 8th, 2016Two stories from the NYT that aroused my interest, for different reasons:
Emperor Akihito of Japan wants to step down from the throne. But it isn’t that simple. There’s no provision in the law that allows him to step down and have his son, Crown Prince Naruhito, take over the throne, so the Japanese government would have to change the law. But the Emperor can’t ask for that directly, because that would be meddling in politics. So he has to hint that he’d like the law changed. But people are concerned that if the government does change the law, they would be exerting undue influence over the throne. So Japan has a mess to sort out, one that’s also tied up with the question of allowing women to take the throne, and what the role of the Emperor should be in present day Japanese society.
One of the things that I found most striking about this article was a reference – which appears to have been deleted from the current version of the article, but there are comments mentioning it – to Crown Prince Naruhito’s wife, Masako, Crown Princess of Japan, who according to the article (this is also backed up some by Wikipedia) has lived in virtual seclusion for the past fifteen years battling crippling depression. That’s about the saddest thing I’ve heard in a long while.
Story number two: a man named Neil Horan, who lives in London, was upset that Vanderlei de Lima was selected to light the Olympic flame.
Why?
Neil Horan shoved Vanderlei de Lima into the crowd during the 2004 Olympic marathon, probably costing him the gold medal. (De Lima ended up winning the bronze.)
I believe “asshole” is actually the word the paper of record is looking for here. But what reason does Horan have for being so worked up?
That’s funny. I would have said the person who failed in “basic manners of human decency and courtesy” was Horan, when he pushed an athlete that had done nothing to him into a crowd and ruined his chance at winning the race.
Seriously. This guy is upset because the man he wronged refuses to accept his apologies, or even contact him. That’s not surprising; that’s the kind of behavior you expect from delusional assholes.
The question on my mind is: why did the NYT chose to devote space to the rantings of an attention-seeking nut?