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White hat hackers target the iPhone


iPhone 10/31

How secure is your smartphone? We may find out next month.

Hackers and computer security experts gathering on March 18 in Vancouver, British Columbia, for the third annual Pwn2Own contest will be targeting five smartphones: an Apple (AAPL) iPhone, a Research in Motion (RIMM) BlackBerry and phones running on Google's (GOOG) Android, Microsoft's (MSFT) Windows Mobile and Nokia's (NOK) Symbian operating systems.

The contest, sponsored by 3Com's (COMS) TippingPoint computer security division, will award $10,000 prizes to anyone who can break into one of the phones and "pwn" it — hacker and Internet-gamer slang meaning to conquer or gain ownership. The smartphones themselves will be awarded as prizes to whomever cracks them first.

Under the rules of the contest, the organizers will reduce the difficulty each day that the smartphones are able fend off the attacks. The first day the phones with be "raw metal," with no applications installed, forcing contestants to use Wi-Fi or network exploits. On the second day, the rules will be relaxed to allow the applications that come installed with the phones, including e-mail and Web browsers, but no third-party apps or downloads.

A second Pwn2Own contest track will pit hackers against browsers, with $5,000 prizes for contestants who can break the security of one of these five Web browser configurations: Internet Explorer 8, Firefox or Chrome installed on a Sony (SNE) Vaio running Windows 7 as well as Safari or Firefox installed on a Macbook running Mac OS X.

The prizes are awarded on a "per bug" basis. If more than five people win prizes, TippingPoint will award additional $5,000 bonus prizes for Most Interesting Browser flaw, Most Interesting Mobile Device Flaw, and Best in Show.

The Pwn2Own contest is run in conjunction with the annual CanSecWest security conference, now in its 10th year. The contest made headlines in the Apple press last year when Charlie Miller, a former National Security Agency employee, broke into a MacBook Air in less than two minutes under the second day's relaxed rules, which permitted him to direct the laptop to a website preloaded with an exploit code. See here.

Zero Day InitiativeWhen it's not running contests, TippingPoint operates a so-called ZeroDay Initiative in which it pays computer security specialists — also known as "white hat hackers" — a bounty for previously undiscovered vulnerabilities in return for a promise not to exploit them.

TippingPoint, in turn, notifies the vendor and simultaneously develops a patch that it offers to its security clients. Once the vendor has developed its own patch, TippingPoint and the vendor coordinate public disclosure. The researcher can either be given credit for the discovery or, if he or she prefers, remain anonymous.

Pwn2Own 2009 runs from March 18-20. The rules and prizes are posted here.

Is it a good idea to encourage hacking? Is there some kind of corporate disclosure that takes place?

Go Jack…

Posted By Bill Buchannon, Washington DC.: March 2, 2009 2:31 PM

Is it a good idea to encourage hacking? Is there some kind of corporate disclosure that takes place?

Go Jack…

Posted By Bill Buchannon, Washington DC.: March 2, 2009 2:31 PM

Chloe? HA! Jack Bauer would simply torture the device until it told him ALL its flaws AND where the bomb is.

Posted By Buchanan, Los Angeles, CA: February 27, 2009 1:50 PM

Chloe? HA! Jack Bauer would simply torture the device until it told him ALL its flaws AND where the bomb is.

Posted By Buchanan, Los Angeles, CA: February 27, 2009 1:50 PM

Chloe FTW!!!! HA!

Posted By jeff, edmonton, alberta: February 26, 2009 11:16 PM

Chloe FTW!!!! HA!

Posted By jeff, edmonton, alberta: February 26, 2009 11:16 PM

misleading headline!

Posted By Jon – Canada: February 26, 2009 7:53 PM

misleading headline!

Posted By Jon – Canada: February 26, 2009 7:53 PM

That would be Google Android, not Ambian.

ex ped: How'd that get in there? Must have dozed off at the keyboard. Fixed now. Thanks.

Posted By Chad, Seattle WA: February 26, 2009 1:56 PM

That would be Google Android, not Ambian.

ex ped: How'd that get in there? Must have dozed off at the keyboard. Fixed now. Thanks.

Posted By Chad, Seattle WA: February 26, 2009 1:56 PM

Chloe will just open a subnet.

Posted By Jack Bauer, Los Angeles CA: February 26, 2009 1:49 PM

Chloe will just open a subnet.

Posted By Jack Bauer, Los Angeles CA: February 26, 2009 1:49 PM

My money is on Chloe from "24."

Posted By ND in MSP: February 26, 2009 1:09 PM

My money is on Chloe from "24."

Posted By ND in MSP: February 26, 2009 1:09 PM

And if you can't hack into Google's phone, at least you can put it to sleep.

Posted By Charles Lee, San Francisco CA: February 26, 2009 1:08 PM

And if you can't hack into Google's phone, at least you can put it to sleep.

Posted By Charles Lee, San Francisco CA: February 26, 2009 1:08 PM
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Philip Elmer-DeWitt

Philip Elmer-DeWitt
Steve Jobs, goes the old joke at Apple, is surrounded by a reality distortion field; get too close and you believe what he's saying. Apple has made believers out of millions of customers — and made a lot of investors rich — but Philip Elmer-DeWitt believes that an ounce of skepticism never hurts when writing about the company. He should know. He's been covering Apple – and watching Steve Jobs operate — since 1982.
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