Paris Hilton and Vin Diesel’s Voicemail Hacked

**EXCLUSIVE** This is an exclusive you will not see anywhere else. As many of you know, yesterday Paris Hilton’s T-Mobile address book was stolen and posted online. But what you don’t know is, shortly thereafter a hacker gained access to both Paris’ and Vin’s private saved voicemail messages. I was contacted anonymously and shown proof of the hacker’s ability to access these private saved voicemails.

The hack is a simple one that I duplicated easily. If you have Sprint or T-Mobile and have auto voicemail login enabled, you are vulnerable to this type of attack. I have auto voicemail login enabled because I hate entering my voicemail PIN number each time I want to check my messages.

The voicemail authentication system is simple. It uses caller ID to validate the originating number – if the caller ID matches your cell phone number (ie. your cell phone calling in to check your voicemail messages), it will log you in automatically.

This system has worked great for the last few years. Well, that is until the advent of commercial caller ID spoofing systems such as CovertCall and Telespoof. For those not in-the-know, caller ID spoofing allows you to change your caller ID number to anything you like. To hack myself, I simply logged into CovertCall and placed a spoofed call to my cell phone. The spoofed call was to my cell phone, from my cell phone, forwarded to a pay phone. Sprint (my provider) thought I was calling from my cell, and automatically logged me in (even though I was performing this from a pay phone down the street).

As you can see, the hacker used the same method to access Paris Hilton’s and Vin Diesel’s private voicemails.  CovertCall offers free call recording, so the hacker was also able to save the voicemails to disk (I wouldn’t have believed it, had I not heard them myself).  From what they tell me, of the entire list only those two accounts used the auto login method.  NOTE: This article is for informational purposes only – accessing someone’s voicemail without their consent is highly illegal.

Originally from kevin rose dot com

Tetris Tower 3D threatens consume all our (free) time

Tetris tower

Not that we would possibly have any reason to complain, but what’s up with people making physical versions of our favorite classic games? Are they trying to shut down Engadget by rejuvinating obsessions with our favorite games of yesteryear? Because we might just break down altogether over this Connect-Four-like Tetris Tower 3D tabletop game (made by the very same people who gave us the Tetris and Street Fighter II standalones). As you may have guessed, it picks the next block, and you drop it down slots to its destination (we hope they’re keyed to prevent Ls from becoming Js, and Ss becoming Zs)—whomever has more lines when you get to the top wins. (We were kind of wishing they’d figure out a way to make the lines disappear, though.) Now if you’ll excuse us, we will be closing up shop early today.

[Via GadgetryBlog]

Originally posted by Ryan Block from Engadget

Woman Finds Penis in Bottle of Ketchup

A Swedish woman said on Sunday that she had found a penis in a bottle of ketchup. However Viktoria Ed said she was lucky enough to discover the organ before putting the sauce on her bread rolls, unlike her husband and their children. I’m not making this up. Read for yourself.

Originally from digg / tommytrc / dug