In the old days, thieves used explosives to get into a safe. But these days for one kind of Brinks safe, all it takes is a USB stick with 100 lines of code. The surprising findings will be described ...
Master thief Willie Sutton famously said he robbed banks because that's where the money was. Of course, he also got caught. But today's thieves don't have to expose themselves to the extra security at ...
As typically portrayed in action movies, breaking into an ostensibly impenetrable safe often requires a world class lock-picker or, barring that, an array or C4 explosives positioned in just the right ...
In the old days, thieves used explosives to get into a safe. But these days for one kind of Brinks safe, all it takes is a USB stick with 100 lines of code. The surprising findings will be described ...
Yet this – opening a Brinks CompuSafe Galileo using its standard USB port, a keyboard and 100 lines of code – was most definitely possible for a pair of security researchers, Daniel Petro and Oscar ...
When it comes to security, a safe—the physical device in which money is deposited for safekeeping—is quite literally supposed to be safe. Yet, according to new research set to be demonstrated at the ...
Windows XP is the venerable war horse of operating systems. What it isn’t is the greatest software to base your supposedly super-secure safe system on. But hey, that’s just what Brinks did. Next month ...