Archive for the ‘Cool stuff’ Category

The Art of Failure 2010

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010

When a microchip is born during the prototyping phase, it doesn’t always come out as expected. Analysis of these failures often brings to the eye very peculiar images.. Check the slideshow below!

Just as one man’s trash is another man’s treasure, one person’s systems failure is another one’s masterpiece. This is the third year that the “Art of Failure Analysis”was featured at the IEEE International Symposium on the Physical and Failure Analysis of Integrated Circuits (IPFA). Participants submitted the most intriguing images they’d captured during chip autopsies. Favorite pictures from the collection, which range from charming to just plain creepy, were on display at the symposium from 5 to 9 July in Singapore.

Source: http://spectrum.ieee.org

New Firefox iFrame Bug Bypasses URL Protections

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010

There is a bug in Mozilla’s flagship Firefox browser related to the way the browser handles obfuscated URLs in iFrames. However, a Mozilla official said the bug poses “very low” risk to users.

Johnathan Nightingale of Mozilla said in a blog post late Tuesday that the bug poses little risk to users. “This issue poses very low risk to users. This attack relies on user confusion about the true destination of a link, and only someone examining the HTML source of the page would ever see the deceptive URL. Most users do not view the source of loading pages, and are therefore unlikely to be impacted by this attack,” Nightingale, the director of development for Firefox, wrote.

He added that the company doesn’t plan to fix the bug, as there is little chance of it being exploited. “There is currently no fix in plan since Mozilla does not believe this can be used to attack users. Firefox ships with built-in phishing and malware protection that warns users if they are attempting to visit a dangerous URL, and these attempts at deception do not impact that protection,” he wrote.

The problem of URL obfuscation is not a new one, and neither is it novel for attackers to use iFrames as an infection vector for visitors to a compromised Web site. Web-based attacks have been employing various forms of URL obfuscation for years now, and iFrames are a favorite of attackers because of their ability to perform malicious actions in the background of a victim’s Web session.

The new flaw, which already is in the Mozilla Bugzilla system, is in all of the current versions of Firefox, according to researchers at Web application security firm Armorize. URL obfuscation often is used by attackers to hide the true address of a malicious site that they’re directing users to, typically as part of a phishing or drive-by download attack. But browsers now check for this behavior and will warn users when a URL appears to have been tampered with, explaining that this may not be the site they’re looking for.

Full story @ threatpost.com

Intel Brings Integrated Silicon Optics Closer

Friday, August 6th, 2010

4 August 2010—The race to replace copper wiring with optics in chip-to-chip communications reached a new milestone last week as Intel announced it had produced a system using silicon-based photonics to transmit data between printed circuit boards at 50 gigabits per second.

”We’re bringing silicon manufacturing to optical communication,” says Mario Paniccia, director of Intel’s Photonics Technology Lab. ”It changes the way in the future that we’re going to connect.” Until recently, optical communications was done using exotic semiconductors and other expensive components. Making such systems in silicon should lower their price and allow for easy integration into computers.

The prototype, which was announced at the Integrated Photonics Research Conference in Monterey, Calif., takes several discrete technologies that Intel has invented over the past few years and combines them into one package. These include a hybrid silicon/indium phosphide laser, a silicon modulator operating at 40 Gb/s, and a germanium detector, also operating at 40 Gb/s. The company has brought those together into a four-channel link, with each channel operating at 12.5 Gb/s, for a total bandwidth of 50 Gb/s. ”We’ve always said the real value of silicon photonics is in integration,” Paniccia says.

Read the full article over at: http://spectrum.ieee.org