Dallo scorso martedì WhatsApp ha abilitato per tutti i suoi clienti (circa 1 miliardo) la crittografia "end to end" in modo da rendere meno vulnerabili le conversazioni: in pratica un messaggio parte già cifrato da un dispositivo, viaggia sui server di WhatsApp in forma cifrata (nemmeno loro potrebbero leggere i messaggi adesso), ed arriva al destinario ancora cifrato e pronto per essere decriptato.
Per attivare la crittografia è necessario avere l'ultima versione della App. Ora è più difficile per l'eventuale ficcanaso spiare i nostri messaggi. Diventerebbe inoltre impossibile per WhatsApp fornire ad un tribunale le comunicazioni degli utenti.
Per quanto le comunicazioni siano criptate, è bene ricordare che una copia dei messaggi è sempre visibile nei dispositivi dei destinatari, sui server di Apple se è attivo il backup di iCloud e su quelli di Google quanto i dati vengono salvati su Drive.
Per confermare i propri sospeti sull'attività terroristica di Junead Khan, la polizia inglese di Luton ha utilizzato tecniche di ingegneria sociale per farsi consegnare il telefono dal proprietario e disattivare il pin di sicurezza del dispositivo. Polizia di Luton 1, FBI zero.
Un attaccante utilizza una versione sofisticata di phishing in cui si finge un dirigente della Mattel (utilizzando una mail non sgrammaticata e rispettando le direttive aziendali per i pagamenti - sospetto un colpo dall'interno) richiedendo un pagamento di 3 milioni di dollari ad un nuovo fornitore in Cina (il destinatario della mail era uno dei dirigenti preposti ai pagamenti).
Scientists from ETH Zurich have taken inspiration from the natural world in a bid to devise a storage medium that could last for potentially thousands of years. They say that genetic material found in fossils hundreds of thousands of years old can be isolated and analysed as it has been protected from environmental stresses.
"(The) fascination of having this very, extremely old information - a hundred thousand years, older than anything else humanity knows - in DNA. So it kind of tells us that it's a really stable material which can endure nature or the environment for a very long time," said Dr. Robert Grass, a senior scientist at ETH Zurich's Department of Chemistry and Applied Biosciences.
In order to protect information-bearing DNA they encapsulated it in a synthetic 'fossil' shell made from a microscopic silica glass particle with diameter of roughly 150 nanometres.
"We looked at ways of stabilising DNA, and we developed a method of encapsulating DNA into small glass particles. And we've shown that in these particles traces are more stable, these DNA traces are more stable than they are otherwise in the environment," added Grass.
The researchers say that encapsulation in silica is roughly comparable to that of fossilised bones. The long-term stability of the DNA can be estimated by comparisons to other DNA storage facilities, such as Norway's Svalbard Global Seed Vault, where genetic material is stored at minus 18 degrees Celsius and can survive for more than a million years.
To demonstrate the technology, the researchers encoded in DNA "The Methods of Mechanical Theorems" written by ancient Greek scientist Archimedes at least two thousand years ago. Grass explained how his team devised a method for translating the written word into DNA. "We decide how a letter is translated to a sequence of, let's say, nucleotides - so the building blocks of DNA. And so we then generate an enormous file that instead of letters and spaces and numbers, it's just a sequence of A, C, T and G," he said. "This file we send to a company and that company synthesises that DNA according to our file we sent them. So they then synthesise DNA sequences with exactly the sequence of the nucleotides that we predefined."
They then simulated the degradation of the DNA over a long period of time by storing it at a temperature between 60 and 70 degrees Celsius for up to a month, replicating the chemical degradation that takes place over hundreds of years within a few weeks. The glass shells turned out to be particularly robust and, through the use of a fluoride solution, the DNA could be easily separated from the glass so the information can be read.
Successfully decoding the DNA-encoded information required a built in fail-safe mechanism. New algorithms designed by Reinhard Heckel from ETH Zurich's Communication Technology Laboratory added extra layers of information to the actual data so that it was still accurate and error-free even if one part of the data got lost or shifted.
Despite proving the technology at their lab in Zurich, the team concedes that viable DNA data storage will need significant investment to become a reality. While the hardware to decode the DNA has become cheaper, the cost of actually manufacturing DNA with the information encoded inside is still very expensive. Grass said it will take investment from governments and large corporations to make it possible.
But he added that the prospect of storing mankind's collective knowledge in a sprinkling of synthetic DNA could eventually mean information security for future generations.
"If you, for example, think of a tablespoon filled with DNA; that would include all of the information on Facebook and Wikipedia and Twitter - and all that just in that small heap of DNA. Whereas nowadays you need enormous server farms and cooling and maintenance because the current methods decay over time," said Grass.
"In that tablespoon you would have everything very stable in a very small space with a guaranteed stability for a very long time."