Is truecrypt 7.2 safe7/20/2023 ![]() ![]() Camera-equipped drones can and will be used for everything from the theft of industrial secrets to voyeurism by creepy neighborhood Peeping Toms. Flying robots open up new opportunities for crime. But drones are no longer the sole domain of the military, and just as with many new technologies, they can easily fall into the wrong hands. At the event, starbug (aka Jan Krissler) gives a talk where he successfully uses photographs to crack passwords, uses latex to foil a fingerprint scanner to log in to Windows, and finishes by creating a representation of his own fingerprint to log in to an iPhone using Touch ID.Īmericans know their government uses unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), or drones, on military and intelligence missions from surveillance to assassination. This is a European hacker group holding its annual Chaos Communication Congress event this week. There's a new talk about hacking biometric logins that's been published by the Chaos Computer Club. It is presented with additional warnings that "Using Truecrypt is not secure" and "You should download TrueCrypt only if you are migrating data encrypted by TrueCrypt." The newest version of TrueCrypt, version 7.2, was available for download on the bottom of the page, but it can only decrypt, not encrypt, data. 'TrueCrypt, a popular free, open-source program to encrypt your data is "not secure as it may contain unfixed security issues," users are being told.' Viewpoint 1: Sophisticated technology does not make us more secure ![]() Prompt: Sophisticated technology does not make us more secure? How true is this?įocus/Framework: technology, internet, data, computer software, computer engineering
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