I'm not a programmer, but it seems to me someone could easily create
a reasonably convincing spoof of CalNet. Is there any basis to my
concern, and if so, what might be done (other than paying very close
attention each and every time)?
David
At 1:41 PM -0700 7/24/07, Christoffer Heckman wrote:
>
>Our employees have worked on teams developing proofs of concept for
>attacks such as what you mentioned Tom, showing that people would
>happily send their information away to a phony AirBears site, facebook
>site, or worse, banking sites.
-- David Radwin, Principal Analyst // radwin_at_berkeley.edu Office of Student Research, University of California, Berkeley 2223 Fulton St # 2032, Berkeley, CA 94720-2032 Tel. 510.642.2097; Fax 510.642.2894 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ The following was automatically added to this message by the list server: To learn more about Micronet, including how to subscribe to or unsubscribe from its mailing list and how to find out about upcoming meetings, please visit the Micronet Web site: http://micronet.berkeley.edu/ Messages you send to this mailing list are public and world-viewable, and the list's archives can be browsed and searched on the Internet. This means these messages can be viewed by (among others) your bosses, prospective employers, and people who have known you in the past.Received on Tue Jul 24 2007 - 15:53:55 PDT
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