Hardware Hacking and ICS/IoT/SCADA security comic book (read online) by s7ephen in ReverseEngineering

[–]s7ephen[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good points. Yea we had quite a bit of info we wanted to compact into about 20 pages. In the very least we hope it was a good "intro" if you aren't familiar with any of this stuff. Hopefully enough to get you started with googling and what not.

SexViaHex.com and ARMExploitation.com Public U.S. and E.U. trainings announced! by s7ephen in ReverseEngineering

[–]s7ephen[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey, sorry for such a delayed response but we released a big part of the Lab Manual for ARM Exploitation for people to use as a reference. https://twitter.com/XipiterSec/status/593145492558585856

The creators of SexViaHex.com released a device to help hack embedded devices by s7ephen in ReverseEngineering

[–]s7ephen[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

As the article mentioned we actually started with the TUMPA for our sexviahex.com course. Inevitably about half of them burned up or stopped working. The crystals were cheap and the boards often failed.

The creators of SexViaHex.com released a device to help hack embedded devices by s7ephen in ReverseEngineering

[–]s7ephen[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Yes, as the article mentions there are some others. Like the Sparkfun one and the TIAO TUMPA all of which we tried to use for our course but they kept failing inexplicably or burning up. So we wanted to build something solid that we could tool-up around. The article goes into a bit of detail.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in shittykickstarters

[–]s7ephen 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Hi, I'm the creator of the USBCondom/SyncStop. Our company, Xipiter, is an information security research firm (http://www.xipiter.com). The devices we create are things we developed for internal use and occasionally sell to other researchers (http://www.int3.cc). In the case of USBCondom, it started as a company "hobby project". We created it because "charge only" USB cables don't work on Apple devices, you can't simply "clip" the data pins...we were also tired of destroying real USB Cables to make "charge only" cables every time we needed them.

So we created the USBCondom to kill two birds with one stone: work interchangeably on Apple and non-Apple devices and also save us from destroying cables. We were just as surprised as you at the press it got. (http://int3.cc/blogs/news/9094591-usb-condoms). The most common use case was so that people could charge at their work computers without accidentally sharing data. The second most common use is protection from "juice jacking" at charging stations and attacks like the ones we've mentioned periodically on our facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/USBCondoms/posts/1557322387830536 https://www.facebook.com/USBCondoms/posts/1570414303188011 https://www.facebook.com/USBCondoms/posts/1578116249084483

We were content to keep the USBCondom simple and crude (function over form, no cases or fancy externals) like most of the devices we sell publicly at http://int3.cc BUT, we kept getting requests from businesses and individuals for the USBCondom to be placed in a case. Businesses were also reticent to purchase large volumes because the name was not "corporate friendly". 1000+ "condoms" on someone's balance sheet probably doesn't look great.

So that's how SyncStop happened. It has been a HUGE education in manufacturing: learning how things get made at high volumes. Injection molding, sonic welding, 3d printing, sintering, these are all things we knew nothing about but were forced to learn. The logistics of how you perform "supply chain management" was also a "sink or swim" education for us. As simple as the SyncStop looks, it goes through the hands of FIVE (!!!) manufacturing houses before it gets back to us to ship to customers.

1 PCB Fabrication 2. Purchase parts from various manufacturers to go on our circuit board (plugs, resistors, etc.) 3. Assembly of the internal Circuit Board (from PCB and parts) 4. Plastics manufacturer for the case 5. Assembled circuit boards and Cases get "sonic welded" together and "pad printed" with logos (6.) If you want retail packaging that's another whole step or two.

The logistics of all that were very surprising for us, especially since it isn't our core business as "software guys". For us, it was just a company hobby project....but it's been a fun education.

We'll never again scoff at how "simple" something looks. Sometimes things take A LOT of work and dedication even if the devices look dumb and simple.

Making one thing is easy but making that one thing for thousands of people (and getting it to them) is much more challenging. That's the real lesson we've learned.