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I'm Drew Breunig and I obsess about technology, media, language, and culture. I live in New York, studied anthropology, and work in advertising technology.

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Mike Tassey and Richard Perkins turned a 14 pound, six foot long, unmanned aerial vehicle into the mother of all wardriving setups.

The WASP, built from a retired Army target drone converted from a gasoline engine to electric batteries, is equipped with an HD camera, a cigarette-pack-sized on-board Linux computer packed with network-hacking tools, including the BackTrack testing toolset and a custom-built 340 million word dictionary for brute-force guessing of passwords, and eleven antennae. On top of cracking Wi-Fi networks, the upgraded WASP now also performs a new trick: impersonating the GSM cell phone towers used by AT&T and T-Mobile to trick phones into connecting to the plane’s antenna rather than their carrier, allowing the drone to record conversations and text messages on 32 gigs of storage.

(Via Slashdot)

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  1. randombutgood reblogged this from dbreunig
  2. waldr reblogged this from dbreunig and added:
    More than just a plane
  3. dbreunig posted this