The Low-End Approach To Wireless Hacking
Adrian writes "Zack Anderson, an MIT student, created a solution to wardriving on a budget: warcarting. The Warcart is a shopping cart retrofitted with just about every sort of wireless sniffing device available. It has pivoting antennas and a smoke grenade launcher. It can even dispense infected USB flash drives. It's part of a talk about subway fare-collection-system vulnerabilities that will be given at Defcon 16 in a few days." "Mostly as a joke," says the site — but only mostly.
or does it have a really long extension cord?
One of our competitors trademarked the term "hypothesis". From now on, we will call them "boneheaded ideas".
We realized that Skynet started, not with an evil corporation or secret government project, but with a wise-ass MIT student and a shopping cart.
SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
I'm gonna start a pool on how long it takes before the guy using this gets 'detained' or otherwise harassed by the gov't for looking suspicious. I give it a month.
A shopping cart loaded down with monitoring and recording equipment?
That's cool. Some tool pushing it around, broadcasting music, and pretending private property is public? That's rather obnoxious.
The operator seems to be the only difference between an interesting application of technology and some douche nozzle who wants his fifteen minutes of fame by trying to coax people into a conflict just so he can "make a point".
If I only had a moose...
Pushing a Trolley with intent?
He might try to make a run for it, That's a cop chase I'd like to see on TV....
A learning experience is one of those things that say, 'You know that thing you just did? Don't do that.' - D. Adams
I would take this more as a sign of not enough beer.
Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
I really want one, so what is the first step . . . Oh Yeah, Steal a shopping cart ?
We are Dead Stars looking back Up at the Sky
Only from MIT would something so stupid get so much attention.
FTA: To understand the Warcart requires one understand a bit of history first. Wardriving, that is, driving with a laptop computer and tracking WiFi access points, first became popular around 2001.
Well, if we're going to talk about history, how about wardialing in the 1980s, clearly the precursor to wardriving. The name goes back to the movie Wargames, in which the main character writes a program to find compuers by dialing phone numbers in sequence -- so the first wardialers were called "WarGames Dialers".
As I recall, we could wardial thousands of phone numbers in a night and net several dozen modems... boy, that was awhile ago. Get off my lawn!
$nice = $webHosting + $domainNames + $sslCerts
Interior lights add to the intimidation factor of the Warcart.
Yes. Yes, they certainly do.
Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
It really isn't very useful without a GPS Unit. How else would they map out their new Findings ?
We are Dead Stars looking back Up at the Sky
I started looking at the comments before watching the video and every other one was putting this guy down and calling him a douche-$(insertwordhere). After watching the video, it appears that half of Slashdot has no appreciation for feeding the inner geek, and is just pissed off that this guy had live females stop and actually talk to him.
Ubuntu: If at first you don't succeed, blindly slap a sudo in front of it
At any given moment, you're breaking some law. Disorderly conduct, disturbing the peace, etc. etc. Charges are easy to make up. And they don't have to stick, either - the arrest can still be effected. Then there's either some resisting arrest or an accident that results in the cart getting tipped over and all the equipment breaking.
At the height of the CB craze, and while on a mandatory separation from my car, I mounted a CB on a 10-speed, including a 1/4 wave stainless steel whip antenna. With a spring. I don't remember why. I learned a lot of practical physics with that rig. Newtons laws of motion, angular momentum, all kinds of things when taking a corner with that damn antenna waving around. Also a lot about weight of batteries. The shine will come off this Warcart rather fast.
Why, without your clothes, you're naked, Miss Dudley!
I concur with some fellow above who noted that we must be losing touch with our inner geek. Even if thing is riddled with illegal shit and the guy who created it is kind of an idiot, cheers to him for indulging himself.
;p
Then again, this comes from a guy who spends ALL of his spare time making wireless thin clients out of old laptops for mounting in picture frames and other surfaces in his house. Gotta get on that solar power next, this shit is getting expensive.
The point, to hell with all you nay-sayers. Go back to whatever boring, gainfully-employed thing is is that you are doing while the rest of us have fun.
If you don't know what you're doing, you can't make mistakes.
Why...is it against the law to bring a shopping cart full of computer equipment into an airport?
Of course it is. Doing anything odd or unusual or that makes someone confused or uncomfortable is terrorism.
"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - Evelyn Beatrice Hall, re Voltaire