TEDxMidAtlantic 2011 - Avi Rubin - All Your Devices Can Be Hacked
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Uploaded on Dec 1, 2011
Avi Rubin is Professor of Computer Science at Johns Hopkins University and Technical Director of the JHU Information Security Institute. Avi's primary research area is Computer Security, and his latest research focuses on security for electronic medical records. Avi is credited for bringing to light vulnerabilities in electronic voting machines. In 2006 he published a book on his experiences since this event.
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Top Comments
TheLivirus 1 year ago
Those hacker scientists sure have an awesome job!
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2minutestomammoth 1 year ago
oh god... I hope nobody insane gets hold of this technology: making cars' brakes disengage?
do you think we could protect ourselves better by learning how hacking works?
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All Comments (71)
Ceausu Alexandru 1 month ago
too fucking good the video
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TheSeanB18 2 months ago
Come check out my videos. They will change your life :)
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Firedrake1313 3 months ago
What makes you think any of these attacks have not ALREADY BEEN USED to make an assassination look like an accident?
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shafiq92libra1 5 months ago
Making assasinations look like accidents...
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Przemek P 6 months ago
@tzsxszp h yeah correct. i seriously couldnt believe when my brother say this to me. And, my step mom used to receive an amount every month for taking some tests and surfing web. you can also join from here <<< bit.ly/Rt6V1q?=clxiqsd
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Salvatore Shiggerino 6 months ago
Your mother is right, though her way of mitigating it might not be. Don't resign yourselves to a life under the terror of back doors and shoddy security. Check out the Free Software Foundation and the GNU project at fsf.org and gnu.org, respectively, and you can be free!
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Salvatore Shiggerino 6 months ago
The key to security is free and open source software.
Proprietary developers use security by obscurity because it's cheap, but as this talk shows, reverse-engineering is easy. Free software does not keep secrets from anyone, so vulnerabilities can't be hidden and swept under the rug. And to remain secure, they must have features that actively works to keep the system secure, which is much harder to break than common security by obscurity.
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FoldedArt 8 months ago
My latest IOS iPod disagrees.
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Matanumi 9 months ago
not enitrely. "they" can hack a car radio separately.
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