- FBI director defends phone surveillance program
- Microsoft launches security bounty programs for Windows 8.1 and IE 11 Preview
- Apple end-to-end encryption far from bulletproof
- Java 7 Update 25 fixes 40 security issues, turns on certificate revocation checking
- Statistics reaffirm breach threat, but executive inaction still impeding security: Black Swan
10 scariest hacks from Black Hat and Defcon
Researchers showed all manner of serious attacks on everything from browsers to automobiles.
Remotely shut down insulin pumps
Insulin pumps that diabetics rely on to keep their blood sugar in balance can be shut off remotely, a researcher demonstrated at Black Hat. Jerome Radcliffe, a diabetic himself, showed how he could pick off wireless signals used to control the pump, corrupt the instructions and send the altered commands to the machine. He could force the wrong amount of insulin to be pumped or shut the device off altogether, either of which could be fatal in the wrong circumstances. The problem, he says, is that the devices weren't designed with security in mind.
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- ADMA criticises government plans for compulsory data breach notification
- Google Glass privacy concerns raised by international data protection authorities



























