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Science/Tech
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Title: Programmer Barnaby Jack dies a week before showing off heart-attack hack that can kill a man from 30 feet away
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2013/07/ ... -kill-a-man-from-30-feet-away/
Published: Jul 27, 2013
Author: Jim Finkle
Post Date: 2013-07-27 07:56:45 by Ada
Keywords: None
Views: 204
Comments: 20

BOSTON (Reuters) – Well-known hacker Barnaby Jack has died in San Francisco, a week before he was due to show off techniques for attacking implanted heart devices that he said could kill a man from 30 feet away.

The San Francisco Medical Examiner’s office said he died in the city on Thursday. It gave no details.

Jack, a security expert, became one of the most famous hackers on the planet after a 2010 demonstration in which he forced ATMs to spit out cash, dubbed “Jackpotting,” (reut.rs/gIGXVq )

The hacking community expressed shock as the news of his death spread via Twitter early on Friday. Jack was due to appear at the Black Hat hacking convention in San Francisco next week, demonstrating how he could attack heart devices.

“Wow … Speechless,” Tweeted mobile phone hacker Tyler Shields.

Jack’s most recent employer, the cyber security consulting firm IOActive Inc, said in a Tweet: “Lost but never forgotten our beloved pirate, Barnaby Jack has passed.”

Jack had served as IOActive’s director of embedded device security.

Jack’s genius was finding bugs in the tiny computers that are embedded in equipment such as medical devices and banking machines. He received standing ovations at hacking conventions for his creativity and showmanship.

“You grimy bastard. I was just talking up about your awesome work last night,” Tweeted Dino Dai Zovi, a hacker known for his skill at finding bugs in Apple products. “You’ll be missed, bro.”

Friends and fans alike Tweeted memorials to Jack’s Twitter handle, @barnaby_jack.

Dan Kaminsky, an expert in Internet security, Tweeted that he had hoped the news of Jack’s death was a prank: “God, the stories. Nobody caused such hilarious trouble like @barnaby_jack.”

(Reporting by Jim Finkle; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick)

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 10.

#10. To: Ada (#0)

As someone with a pacemaker, I can tell you it doesn't take a genius to come up with a weapon that can eff-up a pacemaker. But a great deal depends on the particular condition of the patient.

Pacemakers can be disrupted by very strong magnetic fields, which is why they tell us not to go through those airport arches. This was also why 30 or more years ago, people with the old pacemakers (no longer in use and replaced long ago), were told not to stand near microwave ovens. Also, the pacemaker manufacturers have portable devices to adjust pacemakers -- an extension the size of a PC mouse is put on the shirt (even with clothes on) over the pacemaker and magnetic signals back and forth enable the controller to reset the speed of the pacemaker and read-out its record of any anomalous heart activity. As different brands of pacemaker use different signals to be reset, its probable that the one universal signal this Jack was working on was just a strong magnetic blast.

Such a strong magnetic blast would stop the pacemaker - but only for the duration of the blast - and once the magnetism stopped the pacemaker would automatically reset itself within about half-a-minute. A pacemaker patient whose heartbeat was entirely dependent on his pacemaker would have fainted but, assuming the magnetic blast quickly ended, he would be revived within a minute with probably little ill-effect. Patients whose pacemakers were merely intended to kickstart hearts that sometimes failed to beat might not even notice a change. However a magnetic blast strong enough to stop a pacemaker several feet away would involve a tremendous amount of electricity and affect things in all directions - compasses, computers, cellphones, etc., and of course other people with pacemakers who weren't the chosen target. Also probably injure people who had any ferrous metal in their bodies, such as bullet fragments, and some surgical stuff; the magnetic blast could pull those objects out of place and into other organs enough to cause damage.

Yeah, it's a weapon, but clumsy, costly and messy.

Shoonra  posted on  2013-07-27   15:03:36 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 10.

#11. To: Shoonra (#10)

Yeah, it's a weapon, but clumsy, costly and messy.

Sounds exellent for assassination.

titorite  posted on  2013-07-27 15:09:02 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#13. To: Shoonra (#10)

Thanks for confirming that he was on to something. :-)

If you have to show up to plant a "plausible" alternative then my nasty supicious mind immediately concludes that there was another reason.

Original_Intent  posted on  2013-07-27 15:21:41 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 10.

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