Tue 17 Jul 2007
MIT Project aims human buffer overflow at Secret Service
Posted by hevnsnt under Hacking , Life , Social Engineeringfrom arstechnica.com
MIT Project aims human buffer overflow at Secret Service
By Nate Anderson
| Published: July 16, 2007 - 11:59AM CTWe’ve known for years that color laser printers can embed a series of tiny yellow dots on pages they print. The dots—almost invisible under normal circumstances—can be used to determine which particular printer produced the image. Essentially, each printer outputs its own serial number. This is great for busting counterfeiters but raises all sorts of privacy concerns. Now, MIT students are getting involved in the campaign against the dots with the new Seeing Yellow project.
Seeing Yellow is the brainchild of MIT’s Computing Culture research group, which “want to preserve the right to anonymous communication by fighting both printing dots and the government bullying used to sustain them.” The project was conceived after the team received word that an anonymous hacker had called his printer manufacturer to complain and was subsequently visited by the Secret Service, who were curious to know why someone with nothing to hide would want to disable the tracking dots.
The dots (image courtesy of Seeing Yellow)Seeing Yellow now encourages waves of people to contact printer manufacturers, enough so that the Secret Service and other government agencies cannot simply single out those who call to complain. The project is simple: suggest that people call manufacturers, then provide contact information and talking points. That’s it. So far, according to the site, 434 people have called.
Not sure if your printer is on the list? The EFF has a partial list of dot-printing machines. The dots are nearly invisible to the naked eye, but Seeing Yellow points out that the easiest way to see them is to shine a blue light on one of the printed pages. If the dots are there, they will show up as tiny black marks.
5 Responses to “MIT Project aims human buffer overflow at Secret Service”
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July 17th, 2007 at 1:29 pm
“who were curious to know why someone with nothing to hide would want to disable the tracking dots”
What the fuck is wrong with this country?!!
Is this serious? No wonder why Bush’s approval rating is so low right now. How absurd.
July 18th, 2007 at 9:49 am
Yeah because Bush comes up with all these ideas and really has time to worry about printing yellow dots on paper…c’mon, don’t be so dumb.
August 4th, 2007 at 3:46 pm
I find it absurd that they would send the secret service. I could see FBI or another police force, but why the secret service?
BTW: Yellow Dots, and Bush, nothing to do with each other.
August 6th, 2007 at 5:24 pm
“I find it absurd that they would send the secret service. I could see FBI or another police force, but why the secret service?”
Because it’s their job. The Secret Service investigates counterfitting. The dots are an anti-counterfitting measure.
August 7th, 2007 at 4:06 pm
Really? I didnt know that was part of the Secret Service’s job. I always assumed that was FBI. But you know what they say when you assume.
I learned something new today!