Angry Birds Website Hacked, Known As Spying Birds Instead

spying-birdsIt seems that birds are not the only ones who get angry – hackers too, have emotions. They are human after all, and a bunch of hackers have defaced the official Angry Birds website earlier today, citing them as Spying Birds with the NSA logo located right smack on the forehead of the red bird. This defacement of the website came about after reports that both of the U.S. and U.K. intelligence agencies have been gathering user information from the Angry Birds game as well as other popular mobile apps. Rovio, however, has stepped forward to claim that they have not allowed the NSA to spy on Angry Bird gamers.

(more…)

  • Follow: Computers, , , ,
  • Angry Birds Website Hacked, Known As Spying Birds Instead original content from Ubergizmo.

        



    Twitter user claims user name worth $50k was stolen with help from PayPal and GoDaddy

    A twitter user was recently extorted into giving up his twitter user name. It would be bad enough giving up your established twitter user name, but this one was worth … Continue reading

    As coffee brewing methods go, this one’s super-geeky

    Coffee can be super-geeky when you want it to be. Not everyone is content with Nespresso or Keurig, but while drip methods can be simple and still deliver far greater … Continue reading

    How to turn old pizza into pure deliciousness using a waffle iron

    How to turn old pizza into pure deliciousness using a waffle iron

    I nominate Serious Eats’ J. Kenji López-Alt for fast food genius of the year for this clever hack: turn an old pizza slice into a delicious snack using a waffle iron. Oh gods of the junkgourmandize, simplicity can be truly beautiful and succulent indeed!

    Read more…


        

    The Little Snapper Is The Most Adorable Snapchat Hack Ever

    Screenshot 2014-01-27 09.37.48

    Since hackers have poked holes in Snapchat’s relatively lax security, many have had their way with the image sharing service’s APIs, grabbing unread messages and doing things the app doesn’t traditionally let you do. This latest hack, Little Snapper, is far and away the cutest one yet.

    UK-based animator and developer Wesley Hill, who goes by the name Hako on Github, has found a way to print photos you receive through Snapchat onto a Berg Little Printer, an Internet-connected mini thermal printer that can be configured to print out updates from various news sources and social networks. In short, Snapchat photos, which are meant to be ephemeral, become permanent.

    With Little Snapper, you can capture unread Snapchat images, host the image for 45 seconds to give the Little Printer time to parse, and then print the picture. After you have a black-and-white print-out, Little Snapper deletes the image. According to the description provided by Hill, Little Snapper simply requires your username and password to access your account, and only received, not sent, images are printed.

    Hill built Little Snapper as a challenge to himself, and the whole thing took about three weeks to complete. The 18-year-old told TechCrunch that he knew Snapchat’s Snaptcha system was flawed when he was able to get Little Snapper running with no more than an existing account.

    “I think it was poorly implemented if you ask me,” said Hill. “The Snaptcha system wasn’t really effective, and people still got through it regardless. Snapchat’s API didn’t change much either, there was little effort involved to get past.”

    If you have a Little Printer, a Snapchat addiction, and appreciate the decorating style of Russell Crowe in A Beautiful Mind, head on over to this landing page for the Little Snapper.

    Retailer Michaels credit card hack latest in payments breach

    Crafts retailer Michaels is the latest company to suffer a credit card breach, warning customers that it is investigating the potential theft of payment details. The retailer, which operates around … Continue reading

    CNN Twitter and Facebook accounts hacked by Syrian Electronic Army

    Hackers are constantly targeting the social media and websites of major corporations and organizations. In October of last year, the Syrian Electronic Army hacked into President Obama’s social media accounts. … Continue reading

    CNN Twitter Channel Hacked By Syrian Electronic Army

    syrian-electronic-armyThe Syrian Electronic Army (SEA for short) does not seem as though they are about to let up anytime soon, where Twitter accounts are still being compromised. The fourth attack of this month saw CNN’s Twitter account fall into the hands of the Syrian Electronic Army at approximately 6:00 PM eastern time today. CNN’s blog happened to be accessed without any authorization by this group of ‘hacktivists’ who claim to be aligned with Syria’s Assad regime. The tweets were deleted not too long after, but with the way the Internet is these days, it did not take too long before screenshots of the hack surfaced.

    (more…)

  • Follow: Computers, ,
  • CNN Twitter Channel Hacked By Syrian Electronic Army original content from Ubergizmo.

        



    Up to 1.1m cards affected in Neiman Marcus hack

    The Neiman Marcus hack saw potentially 1.1m credit card details stolen, the high-end retailer has admitted, though claims no online customers were impacted nor PINs stolen. “The malware actively attempted … Continue reading

    Chinese government blames cyber attack for internet outage in the country

    The Chinese government announced this week that it believes an internet outage that has hit the country is the result of a cyber attack. Web users within the country were … Continue reading