Laurie claimed that he was able to find a non-public feed from a TV broadcaster that had left their transponder on in a Paris hotel room. Fast forward a dozen years and Laurie commented that the technology to identify satellite feeds has progressed dramatically. Among the reasons why he satellite feed hunting has gotten easier is an open source based satellite received called the dreambox. Laurie explained that the dreambox has a web interface that makes it easier to find streams and provides information on what the stream includes.
Another open source technology also helps to feed hunt satellite content. Going a step further, Laurie claimed that he had created his own python based script called dreaMMap that could create a 3d model of satellite frequency transmissions. With the 3D model the user just does a point and click to steer dish to a particular satellite frequency.
One memory of the Black Hat audience asked Laurie if what he was doing was legal. Laurie shrugged and commented:. Sign in. North America. Audio player loading…. Anthony Spadafora. See more Internet news. Euphoria season 2 is exactly what HBO Max needed in Motorola Razr 3 foldable phone leak says it'll get top-end chipset and lose the notch. Microsoft Teams update will level the playing field for all users. Honor's new foldable phone is bigger and more powerful than the Galaxy Z Fold 3.
Hacker conferences are famous for using quirky, hackable badges. DefCon's badge was a working vinyl LP containing a spoken-word ciphertext copy of the Hacker Manifesto. But at the Chaos Communication Camp, held in Zehdenick, Germany last week, the organizers did something different: they gave out rad1o badges. These software-defined radios are sensitive enough to intercept satellite traffic from the Iridium communications network.
During a Camp presentation entitled "Iridium Hacking: please don't sue us," hackers Sec and schneider demonstrated how to eavesdrop on Iridium pager traffic using the Camp badge. The Iridium satellite network consists of 66 active satellites in low Earth orbit.
Developed by Motorola for the Iridium company , the network offers voice and data communications for satellite phones, pagers, and integrated transceivers around the world. Iridium went bankrupt in , but was later purchased from Motorola in by private investors, who have revived the company.
The largest user of the Iridium network is the Pentagon. It's that it has no security. Originally designed in the s, the Iridium network was obsolete by the time it was launched in Iridium pager traffic is sent in cleartext by default, and most pager traffic remains unencrypted. Despite this, an Iridium internal PowerPoint slide deck marked "Confidential" released by WikiLeaks in boasted that "the complexity of the Iridium air interface makes the challenge of developing an Iridium L-Band monitoring device very difficult and probably beyond the reach of all but the most determined adversaries.
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