Teenager Bill Demirkapi had been ghosted. Hard. "It didn’t feel good,Watch A Wife's Secret (2014)" he explained to the large crowd gathered to hear him speak. "It hurt my feelings.”
But Demirkapi, despite his status as a recent high-school graduate, wasn't lamenting the traditional spurned-love problems typical of his cohort. Far from it. Instead, he was speaking at the famous DEF CON hacker conference in Las Vegas, and the ghoster-in-question was educational software maker Blackboard.
Demirkapi had reported numerous vulnerabilities in Blackboard's software to the company; after initially being in communication with him, the company stopped responding to his emails. But Demirkapi, who found he could access a host of student data — including family military status, weighted GPAs, and special education status — through vulnerabilities in Blackboard's system, was undeterred.
In fact, he was just getting started. And Blackboard wasn't his only target.
Over the course of his high school career, Demirkapi — a budding security researcher — also investigated K-through-12 software maker Follett. In doing so, he determined the company left millions of student and teacher records exposed to anyone who bothered to look.
Specifically, he explained, there were more than 5 million student and teacher records in the system that covered over 5,000 schools. Left exposed were students' immunization history, attendance data, school photos, birthdays, and more.
"It was my data too in there," he told the audience of decidedly not teenage hackers. "This was pretty crazy stuff."
He tried to do the right thing and notified both his high school and the software manufacturers of his discoveries. Using a flaw in the system to alert students and teachers to its vulnerabilities, however, earned him a two-day suspension.
"Two days off of school," he said of the punishment. "I think it’s a pretty big win-win."
SEE ALSO: Remotely hacking elevator phones shouldn't be this easyEventually, Follett and Blackboard did listen — and many of the vulnerabilities he reported were patched at the end of July.
"Blackboard is always working hard to improve both the security of our products as well as the process and procedures we leverage in support of security," read a statement the company provided Demirkapi and he shared with DEF CON.
Asked by a member of the crowd what he's going to do next, Demirkapi gave an answer that elicited raucous applause from the hacker crowd: "Start college, maybe break their software."
Never give up on your dreams, Bill. The privacy of millions of students and teachers is counting on it.
Topics Cybersecurity
'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for February 23Madame Tussauds spins high drama, removes Harry and Meghan from Royal FamilyStormzy sums up the exact reason Brits don't like Meghan MarkleThe 9 best Chicken Shop Date episodes to bingeBest PSVR2 games: 8 launch games you should tryMadame Tussauds spins high drama, removes Harry and Meghan from Royal FamilyAriana DeBose's rap about Angela Bassett did the thing at the BAFTAsWordle today: Here's the answer, hints for February 21Wordle today: Here's the answer, hints for February 23Pig lovers, rejoice: Impossible pork and sausage are hereSeth Rogen knows he looks like this dog and thanks you for the complimentGoogle Magic Eraser now available on iPhones, Androids. How to get it.With the the Muse S, you can meditate until you doze offDisney is actually making 'Rogers the Musical' from 'Hawkeye'Why 'Like a Dragon: Ishin' should or shouldn't be your first 'Yakuza'How to have a threesome: managing emotions during group sex'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for February 24Seth Rogen knows he looks like this dog and thanks you for the complimentOh, bother: Everything you need to know about 'Winnie'Sons of the Forest' early access: Release date, price, and platform details BYD produces its 8 millionth EV, takes three months for last million · TechNode South Africa vs. Nepal 2024 livestream: Watch T20 World Cup for free Ant Group sees insurance business boom with 30% y A micrometeoroid hit NASA's giant Webb telescope, but it's OK VisionOS 2 for Apple Vision Pro announced at WWDC 2024, including ultra NASA preps new spacecraft heat shield for Mars landings A meteorite punched a hole in a dog house. Now it's a collector's item. Renault to develop cheaper EV batteries with CATL, LG Energy · TechNode United States vs. Ireland 2024 livestream: Watch T20 World Cup for free Apple Intelligence: Apple announces new era of AI NASA prefers this nickname for Artemis' new lunar rocket NIO, Xpeng, Li Auto to use in TikTok explores local services potential in Southeast Asia · TechNode Apple Maps: Topographic maps announced at WWDC 2024 A NASA rover just found trash on Mars Dusty NASA images show why its Mars lander will soon run out of power A rocket slammed into the moon. NASA got a picture. TSMC’s market value surpasses a trillion dollars for the first time · TechNode Tesla, Huawei, Xiaomi introduce new incentives as China’s EV price war continues · TechNode The vital telescopes discovering Earth
1.5801s , 10131.7890625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch A Wife's Secret (2014)】,Wisdom Convergence Information Network