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Massachusetts Sues to Halt Defcon Subway Hacking Talk

According to CNET, "The state of Massachusetts has asked a federal judge for a temporary restraining order preventing three MIT students from giving a presentation on Sunday about hacking smartcards used in the Boston subway system." It'll be interesting to see whether Dutch-style openness or Soviet-style secrecy prevails in Las Vegas. Update: 08/09 20:57 GMT by T : "Too late," says reader Bluey: "Injunction was already granted."

2 of 270 comments (clear)

  1. Treat it like the DNS flaw. by eggman9713 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Just do it the way that they tried to do it in regards to the recent DNS exploits. Tell the affected organization (Boston subway system authority) that there is a problem and you are willing to work with them to fix it. If they refuse, just leave them the information and say they have x number of days to fix it and if they refuse to do anything, you are going to the press, which technically is true since journalists are allowed in limited numbers at Defcon as far as I know. That way you give them the courtesy of warning them in advance, but you aren't needing to completely shut up about it or let the problem lie unfixed. As a white hat, this guy has a moral obligation to help get problems fixed before the black hats find out.

  2. Re:oh good... let's all bury our heads... by cayenne8 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    "Right, because my idea of a perfect society is one where I can't use the damn transit system unless I want to give up any shred of privacy about my destination, travel habits, and location."

    Well, that does seem to be the goal of the US govt. at this point. The RealID (national id) alone seems to be a huge step in that direction. They aren't gonna let you travel without one soon...within the US even.

    --
    Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........