Archive for 2011/09/11

The 29-year old Hana Beshara and 23-year old Matthew Smith were charged as founders of the site. Zoi Mertzanis (36) and Joshua Evans (34) were identified as most active uploaders and Jeremy Andrew (33) as the person responsible for the site’s security.

http://torrentfreak.com/ninjavideo-admins-and-uploaders-indicted-by-grand-jury-110910/

Ninjavideo website operators charged with criminal copyright conspiracy
http://www.ice.gov/news/releases/1109/110909washingtondc2.htm

Indictment: 
http://www.ice.gov/doclib/news/releases/2011/110909washingtondc2.pdf

Previously:

Several months ago we were informed that NinjaVideo was being closely watched but we had no idea the U.S. authorities were behind it.

In March we received word that Dutch police had arrived at Ecatel, NinjaVideo’s host in The Netherlands. Our sources said that servers had been removed for examination but had been later returned. TorrentFreak contacted Ecatel who told us that “your sources have given you a lead far removed from the truth.”

We also contacted NinjaVideo and gave them what few details we had but after emails back and forth, it became clear that NinjaVideo either couldn’t or wouldn’t be drawn on the information we had provided. Without any absolute clear information or quotable sources we were sadly forced to abandon our planned article.

Now, three months later NinjaVideo is one of the nine websites that were targeted by the U.S. Government.

http://torrentfreak.com/fed-busted-movie-site-informed-of-investigation-months-ago-100701/

Death by abbreviation for DigiNotar hacker?

AIVD https://www.aivd.nl/

GOVCERT http://www.govcert.nl/english/home

FOX-IT https://www.fox-it.com/en/home

OM http://www.om.nl/vast_menu_blok/english/

LOGIUS http://www.logius.nl/english/

OPTA http://www.opta.nl/en/

KLPD (Team High Tech Crime) http://www.politie.nl/KLPD/

NCTb http://english.nctb.nl/

NCSC (National Cyber Security Centre)strategy document

Dutch language news articles:
http://www.nu.nl/internet/2611481/diginotarhack-helpt-bij-aanpak-cybercrime.html
http://www.nrc.nl/nieuws/2011/09/05/de-machtigste-nerd-van-nederland/

Previously:

AIVD, GOVCERT, FOX-IT, OM, LOGIUS and now OPTA the latest abbreviation to investigate DigiNotar
http://vrritti.com/2011/09/07/aivd-govcert-fox-it-om-logius-and-now-opta-the-latest-abbreviation-to-investigate-diginotar/

http://gizmodo.com/5838937/netflix-is-finally-available-on-nearly-all-android-phones

http://gizmodo.com/5838973/nbcs-ipad-app-gives-you-one-less-reason-to-use-hulu-plus

http://www.futureofcopyright.com/home/blog-post/2011/09/11/music-leads-the-way-on-the-bike-through-revolutionary-app.html

http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1255829

How can IP traffic be tunneled through SMS and MMS you ask? Well, web requests via SMS are easy enough — 160 characters is more than enough for most URLs, and multiple SMSes can be used if the contents of any cookies need to be sent. For returning complete web pages, though, things are a little trickier: we’re talking about kilobytes of data, after all. This is where Smozzy’s real hackery takes place: the entire remote resource is downloaded (HTML, images, CSS, JavaScript) and zipped up. The ZIP is then encoded as a PNG image file, with each RGB pixel representing three bytes of the ZIP. The resulting ZIP-cum-PNG is split into multiple parts and delivered via MMS — and the Smozzy Android app simply reverses the process.

The end result is not the fastest web surfing experience you’ll ever have — neither SMS or MMS have quality-of-service priority at T-Mobile’s cell towers, so it takes at least 10 seconds to load a page — but if you don’t have a data plan, you can hardly complain about free interwebs

http://www.extremetech.com/computing/95457-how-to-surf-t-mobile-without-a-data-plan

 

Dutch language news articles:
http://tweakers.net/nieuws/76688/smartphones-en-tablets-blijven-kwetsbaar-voor-valse-ssl-certificaten.html