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Topic Summary

Posted by: Samker
« on: 05. March 2009., 14:52:50 »


I think that this money is safe.  ;D

Probably this is Impossible Mission but We will see.



Posted by: duomaxwell22
« on: 05. March 2009., 07:06:50 »

that contest is useful to provide counter attack on future hackers
Posted by: Samker
« on: 26. February 2009., 11:18:37 »



An annual hacker competition planned for next month has setting its sights on Apple's iPhone and four other smart phones in a contest that will pay cash prizes of $10,000 to anyone who can break in to the mobile devices.

The contest will present contestants with phones running the Android, Symbian, and Windows Mobile operating systems as well a BlackBerry and an iPhone. To qualify for the $10,000 prize, hackers must submit exploits that work against email, SMS test, website browsing, and "other general actions a normal user would take while using the device," according to these rules published 3Com's TippingPoint unit, the competition's sponsor. All devices will be fully patched.

A second-track of the competition will challenge hackers to take their best shots at web browsers. Internet Explorer 8, Firefox, and Google Chrome will be running on a Sony Vaio running Windows 7, and Safari and Firefox will be installed on a MacBook running OS X. Successful exploits in this track will net $5,000 per bug.

This is the third year of the Pwn2Own contest, scheduled for March 18-20 at the CanSecWest security conference in Vancouver, British Columbia. Last year, a brand-new MacBook air was the first to fall during day two of the competition, which pitted the Mac against high-end laptops running Linux and Microsoft's vista. Charlie Miller of Independent Security Evaluators said at the time that he picked OS X because he thought it was the easiest.

The Windows laptop was the next to be hacked, leaving only the Ubuntu machine standing by contest's end.

Contest rules require winning contestants to keep details of their exploits confidential until after the vendor has fixed the underlying vulnerability. Sponsor TippingPoint runs the Zero Day Initiative, which pays bounties for vulnerabilities that are responsibly disclosed.

As has been the case in the past, day one of the competition will require exploits to work on a limited number of applications. On days two and three, the attack surface will be gradually be expanded. Physical access to the mobile devices will not be given.

(The Register)

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