Posted by on under jay freeman, iphe, 3proxy, proxy program, open terminal, iphone, wi fi, rundown, firefox, 3g, emergencies, safari, amp, web page |


Thanks to the excellent work of
the iPhone Dev Team and the porting work of
Jay Freeman as well as the authors of
3Proxy, it is now possible to "tether" your iPhone 3G and use its Internet connection on your laptop.
Warning - Tethering your iPhone is against the iPhone data plan terms. AT&T could slap you with huge fees if you overuse this. I recommend only using it during emergencies.
Here's the basic rundown:
- Jailbreak your iPhone 3G
- Install 3Proxy and Terminal
- Create an ad-hoc Wi-fi network using your laptop
- Join the network with your iPhone
- Find the iPhone's IP address
- Open Terminal and run the proxy program
- Open Safari on your iPhone and open a web page
- Configure your browser to use the proxy
I will be using a Mac and Firefox to demonstrate,...
Read the rest of this post
Tagi: jay freeman, iphe, 3proxy, proxy program, open terminal, iphone, wi fi, rundown, firefox, 3g, emergencies, safari, amp, web page
Posted by on under kathy griffin, pwnage, engadget, jailbreak, hacks, stranger, web page |

Hereâ??s one happy Pwnage advocate. Anyone know who he is? :)

Update: By the way, Woz is no stranger to iPhone Dev Team hacks. Some of you may remember his visiting the Dev Teamâ??s ridiculously easy 1.1.1 jailbreak that required absolutely no PC or Mac at allâ??just a web page visit to http://jailbreakme.com
That was done on Kathy Griffinâ??s actual show: http://www.viddler.com/explore/engadget/videos/23/
Tagi: kathy griffin, pwnage, engadget, jailbreak, hacks, stranger, web page
Posted by on under social networking site, gmt users, minute interval, attack targets, google, massive volumes, security intelligence, waiting 4, email messages, zeus, malware, web page |

wiredmikey writes "On Monday morning, cybercriminals began sending massive volumes of spam email messages targeting LinkedIn users. Starting at approximately 10am GMT, users of the popular business-focused social networking site began receiving emails with a fake contact request containing a malicious link. According to Cisco Security Intelligence, these messages accounted for as much as 24% of all spam sent within a 15-minute interval today. If users click, they are taken to a web page that says 'PLEASE WAITING.... 4 SECONDS..' and then redirected to Google, appearing as if nothing has happened. During those four seconds, the site attempted to infect the victim's PC with the ZeuS Malware via a 'drive-by download' – something that requires little or no user interaction to infect a system."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.




Tagi: social networking site, gmt users, minute interval, attack targets, google, massive volumes, security intelligence, waiting 4, email messages, zeus, malware, web page