Hackers Crack Casino Card Shufflers By Exploiting Simple Flaw To Cheat The House
brobible.com | People have been trying to figure out ways to cheat at gambling since gambling became A Thing in the first place, and while casinos have mastered the art of warding off (and catching) unscrupulous patrons, there are still plenty of ways to gain an edge—as evidence by a new development involving the most popular card shuffling machine on the planet.
Hackers Rig Casino Card-Shuffling Machines for ‘Full Control’ Cheating
wired.com | Security researchers accessed an internal camera inside the Deckmate 2 shuffler to learn the exact deck order—and the hand of every player at a poker table. IN SEPTEMBER LAST year, a scandal blew up the world of high-stakes, livestreamed poker: In a hand at Las Vegas’ Hustler Live Casino, which broadcast its games on YouTube, a relative novice holding nothing but a jack of clubs and a four of hearts successfully called the bluff of a veteran player. No one could possibly think that poor hand might be…
IOActive says drones vulnerable to electromagnetic fault injection attacks
ITWORLD CANADA | Researchers at IOActive have found that drones, even those without known security flaws, can be at risk of electromagnetic fault injection (EMFI) attacks which enables unauthorized control, data theft, and deliberate crashes.
Using Electromagnetic Fault Injection Attacks to take over drones
securityaffairs.com | Electromagnetic fault injection (EMFI) attacks on drones can potentially allow attackers to achieve arbitrary code execution and take over them. While the use of drones continues to grow, researchers from IOActive analyzed how to develop fault injection attacks against hardened Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs).
EU Should Look To Global Tech Innovation Leaders To Realise Economic Security Ambitions
Minutehack | After two years of global economic shocks, the EU is fighting back. On 20 June, the European Commission released its proposed ‘European Economic Security Strategy,’ which President Ursula von der Leyen has presented as a response to a “more contested and geopolitical” world marked by a “changing nature of…risks.”