Posts Tagged ‘social’

Quickly spotting social engineering attempts with TinEye.

Thursday, October 27th, 2011

TinEye is a great service that you can use to search for similar photos on the web. You provide a photo and it compares it to its database looking for similar and modified images.

You can use TinEye to quickly spot fake accounts on social networking sites.

For example. I received this LinkedIn network request the other day.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Not only have I never worked with a “Jennifer Gray”, her profile photo looks like it may be a stock photo. TinEye returned 4 results for stock photography.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Looks like this account may be a recruiting bot or something.

 

TinEye can also be used to verify the authenticity of a photo and to see if it is a repost or duplicate of another photo. It even has Firefox and Chrome plugins!

Toorcon 11, and peoplehacking

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

Toorcon this year was awesome and fun, with the exception of cstone breaking his femur, of course.  I had originally been slated to talk, but a clerical error left my name off of the schedule. Instead I took the role of  ’staff photographer’ and shot the whole event and all the speakers. A few interesting occurences took place:

  • Mckt decided to leave early, and gave me his speaking spot, which I took. Before I was able to speak, barkode approached me and kindly asked me to give my speaking slot to his panel since they desperately needed more time. I agreed. I went from speaking, to not speaking, to speaking to not speaking in one day. I was still a little sad to not be able to give my peoplehacking talk though.
  • Jolly approached me starting out his query with “So Viss, you’re a social engineering guy…” and explained how he wanted to pwn the counting jar contest (explained below)
  • I met a really neat guy from San Francisco that lapses into a really bad scottish accent when I do my really bad irish accent. This made all the dinners and parties we went to hilarious.
  • I spent some time in the lockpicking village teaching new folks how to pick locks (this is fairly standard for me at this point)

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