Three French journalists from Global Security Magazine have been
thrown out of the Black Hat conference in Las Vegas for hacking into fellow
journalists' computers.
Hacking is usually part of the fun at Black Hat and delegates are warned that
hackers are patrolling the conference's public Wi-Fi network trying to steal
data. That data is then posted on a public 'Wall of Sheep' at the venue to
embarrass security specialists who should know better.
However, as the organisers don’t expect journalists to be as adept at network
security the press area is off limits to hacking and runs on a private network.
Nevertheless, the three journalists decided to do it anyway and to try and get
the login details for journalists from CNET and eWeek onto the Wall of Sheep.
However the trio, Dominique Jouniot, Mauro Israel and Marc Brami, were
rebuffed by staff, asked to leave the conference and banned from attending this
year’s DEFCON event as well.
The attack seems to have used a network-sniffing tool called Cain and while
it was successful in obtaining details from an eWeek journalist, CNET reports
that the data retrieved on them was incomplete.
The French journalists have reportedly said that it was all a joke and
designed to make journalists more aware of their own security, an excuse
commonly used in hacking attacks.
But a representative of the Electronic Frontier Foundation is apparently
looking into the affair to see if any laws have been broken.
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