How about this one? http://money.cnn.com/2010/12/14/technology/firesheep_starbucks/index.htm
I thought I'd spread the word and help some laymen out after work. There's a large Starbucks near my apartment. I dropped in, bought some unhealthy food, opened my laptop and turned on Firesheep.
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Logging on to https://www.facebook.com just redirects to an unsecured connection. And while a VPN would create a secure tunnel through the unprotected connection, most users don't have access to one.
The best thing to do is to log out of Facebook and Twitter when using one of these connections.
Half an hour later, I'd collected somewhere between 20 and 40 identities. Since Facebook was by far the most prevalent (and contains more personal information than Twitter), I decided to send the users messages from their own accounts to warn them of their exposure. I drafted a friendly, generic message that stated the location of the Starbucks, what the vulnerability was, and how to avoid it. I sent messages to around 20 people.
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One of them was even on Amazon.com, which I had warned about in my first message.
I targeted him first: I opened up his Amazon homepage, identified something he had recently looked at, and then sent him a "no, seriously" message on Facebook from his account -- including the fun fact about his music choices.
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A compromised Facebook account doesn't just mean someone can view your photos, likes and wall posts. A compromised Facebook account gives someone access to an identity, from which they can perform social engineering attacks and potentially ruin relationships -- both out of boredom and for gain.