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FAA Systems Hacked, Employee Information Released

FAA Systems Hacked, Employee Information Released

If you worry about the Federal Aviation Administration's aging computer systems and their inability to effectively deal with the constant flood of air traffic, perhaps you should spare a thought for the internal systems that keep track of the Administration's thousands of employees. Apparently, they're in need of some attention, too, with the FAA announcing that the names and social security numbers of 45,000 employees were recently accessed by hackers.

In a statement on Monday, the FAA said that the hackers accessed the information of all FAA employees hired before February 2006 at some point last week. There is no word, however, on whether or not these employees' information is being used for nefarious means.

If there's some good news, it's that hackers were not able to access any systems related to air traffic control -- probably because most of the hardware predates the Internet. [From: AP, via The Inquirer]

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Cell Phones

Cell Phone Hacked to Analyze Blood, Detect Diseases on the Spot



Not that the whole using-cellphones-for-disease-detection is completely fresh, but the latest handset hack for medical purposes is still mighty impressive. UCLA researcher Dr. Aydogan Ozcan has essentially converted a standard cellphone into a portable blood tester of sorts, which is capable of detecting HIV, malaria and various other illnesses. Put as simply as possible, the device works by analyzing blood cells that are placed on an integrated off-the-shelf camera sensor and lit up with a filtered light source. Said light source exposes unique qualities of the cells, and from there, the doc's homegrown software interprets the data and determines what's what. So, has anyone given this guy the main line to NTT DoCoMo, or what?

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

iPhone

At Last, the iPhone Robot



Robots are awesome, we can all probably agree on that. Robots made from iPhones are basically an extension of that awesomeness, crossed with an element of unimaginable, ludicrous fun, which is why we're pleasantly surprised to see that such a device finally exists. Using a jailbroken iPhone 3G running some Ruby code, an Arduino CPU, a TA7291P motor, and 4 AA batteries, the creator is able to pilot the bot via Wi-Fi from a nearby computer, all the while recording its view for later playback.

The results look pretty cool, and trust us, you're definitely going to want to check out the video after the break. As far as we can tell, by the way, the lyrics to the song in the video are "iPhone with keyboard," which seemingly refers to this, um... iPhone with keyboard we saw earlier today -- apparently from the hands of the same craftsman, who seems like a very busy guy. Especially if he wrote the song!

[Via iPhone World]

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Computers

Diebold Admits Its Electronic Voting Machines Are Faulty

For years, Diebold has embarrassed itself by claiming that obvious faults were actually not faults at all, and during the past decade or so, it mastered the act of pointing the finger. Now that it has ironically renamed itself Premier Election Solutions, it's finally coming clean.

According to spokesman Chris Riggall, a "critical programming error that can cause votes to be dropped while being electronically transferred from memory cards to a central tallying point" has been part of the software for ten years. The flaw is on both optical scan and touchscreen machines, and while Mr. Riggall asserts that the logic error probably didn't ruin any elections (speaking of logic error...), the outfit's president has confessed to being "distressed" about the ordeal. More like "distressed" about the increasingly bleak future of his company.

[From: The Washington Post via Techdirt]

Audio/Video, Computers

Hackers Post Flashing Animations on Epilepsy Support Forum

Hackers Post Flashing Animations on Epilepsy ForumPeople are just plain cruel sometimes. Take, for instance, a group of hackers who thought it would be freakin' hilarious to break into a support forum for epileptics and post flashing animations all over the page.

The Epilepsy Foundation found out about the attack with in 12 hours and closed down the forums, but not before people, like RyAnne Fultz (pictured), suffered headaches and seizures. Hopefully someone will find out who these people are, and we'd like to volunteer to lead the vigilante mob to their doorstep.

From Engadget

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Audio/Video, TV

Teen Derails Trains With Hacked TV Remote

Teen Derails Trains With Hacked TV Remote
Kids do the darnedest things sometimes. Take the 14-year-old from Lodz, Poland, who hacked a television remote control to manipulate his city's tram system, thereby derailing four trams, and injuring 12 people. Little rapscallion, what can you do?

Apparently charge him with endangering public safety and drag him before a juvenile court. Or at least that's what the court in Lodz did in the case of its teenage resident, who managed figure out how to interfere with the infrared pulses that control the tram system's switches.

In effect, the boy modified a television remote and turned the city's public transportation system in to his own personal Lionel set -- is that brilliant, or just plain wrong?

From Boing Boing


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