It was around 12:30 a.m. on Boobwatch 1 (1996)Wednesday morning, and Justin Wynn and Gary Demercurio were in a bit of a tight spot. Specifically, the two were being arrested on the third floor of Iowa's Dallas County courthouse.
But Wynn and Demercurio weren't there to steal the only evidence linking them to some unnamed crime. Rather, reports the Des Moines Register, the two had been hired by the state court administration to attempt to obtain "unauthorized access" to court documents using "various means."
The two men work as physical penetration testers, or pentesters, for the cybersecurity company Coalfire and were simply doing their job. Unfortunately, that message somehow got lost in translation.
Specifically, the Registerreports that the state court administration now claims it "did not intend, or anticipate, those [security testing] efforts to include the forced entry into a building."
What is and is not off limits — something typically referred to as in or out of scope — during both digital and physical pentests is often a hot-button issue. That the scope of an engagement is often carefully negotiated ahead of time makes sense. After all, you wouldn't want the security company you hired to test your payroll system kidnapping your CEO and demanding he hand over the digital keys.
Coalfire's website includes a detailed penetration testing section, enumerating the various services offered by the company and detailing what a pentest entails.
"Throughout the engagement, we provide ongoing status reports, immediate identification of critical risks, and knowledge transfer to your technical team," reads the company's site. "At the end of the process, we ensure you have a complete understanding of the exploitable vulnerabilities in your environment and recommended remediation strategies."
Physical penetration is a common practice, and is not outside of the industry norm. One such pentester, who goes by Jek Hyde on Twitter, often details her various escapades online with the permission of the targeted client (her Twitter account is worth a follow).
All of this seemed to be lost on the local law enforcement, however. Both Wynn and Demercurio have been charged with possession of burglary tools and third-degree burglary. A $50,000 bond adds injury to the insult of being caught on the job.
But hey, at least the Dallas County courthouse now knows that its alarm system works.
Topics Cybersecurity
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
NYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for May 19: Tips to solve Connections #238
Mum slams Trump on Facebook for calling daughter's murder 'terrorism'
Hot Apple rumor: 'iPhone SE 2' could launch next year
J.K. Rowling's response to this meme about her death is absolutely classic
Outdoor speaker deal: Save $20 on the Soundcore Boom 2
Elizabeth Holmes' lawyers say the Theranos founder isn't paying them
Obama and Richard Branson fought over kitesurfing and we're never getting him back
NASA releases '3D Moon Kit' to help CGI artists to re
Best Sony headphones deal: Over $100 off Sony XM5 headphones
You can finally have a Cheeto that looks like Harambe ... for $99,999
Wordle today: The answer and hints for April 14, 2025
Elizabeth Warren responds to Jacob Wohl's sexcapade smear campaign with a cougar joke
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。