The #covidsafe app is now available in Australia 😷
However, it's a shame that they have decided not to release the source code for full transparency.
Luckily, I'm a curious chap and also a professional mobile developer.
trib.al/XK3MZiW Since they can install viruses without needing the target to open their mail, can this be extended to more malicoous software such as rootkits? How can something like this be prevented. Im thinking by preventing background downloading.
@Shell1nTheGhost My goodness, didnt realise they handled anti-cheat using root kits. Guess i’m not downloading the game. Weighing up a bit of fun against the risks makes it seem not worth it. Not good at fps games anyways :/
Im guessing 80% of the security course plays some sort of game, and 80% of those know of Riot Games’ new game Valorant. Time for you to flex your security skills and earn yourself $100,000!!dotesports.com/valorant/news/…
To all my quarantined friends, be careful when signing up for products and check for any history of security leaks. The below image is not mine, came from Zoom memes for Quaranteens
newsroom.unsw.edu.au/news/science-t… While not security related, in my AI course I asked if AI can go against what its programmed to do in favour of a more logical action, and voila this article pops up a few weeks later.
So in our iphone leak tutorial, someone pointed out that a leak is inevitable, all we can do is minimise the impact. Guess he was right!
news.com.au/technology/gad…
Story time:
Launched spotify for the first time in a year, and it turns out someone has managed to hack into my account and change the associated email so now i can’t even do a password reset
@SubjctToChnge Thats a very valid point, although i think the real reason in this instance is that the company was just reusing their components, the message looks like a prewritten message with the input box name as a variable
@rollthestack Security questions are a common verification used in phone calls. So it's likely a politeness ("workplace hazard") concern not a security one :)
Would there be any security reason to disable profanity in security questions? Most of the time the answer isnt seen by human eyes since theyre hidden behind dots.
@Shell1nTheGhost Also, knowing they have a problem with leap years, get your attacker mindset ready for 2100, which looks like it should be a leap year because its divisible by 4, but is actually not because its divisible by 100.
Robinhood, a popular stocks/crypto trading app was down today for a seemingly impossible-to-forget reason. Such a highly secure service broken by such a simple error. Makes you wonder if any other systems were affected by this
#comp6441