Each are running with a from the appropriate version that has been patched. Can anyone confirm that the test buttons for things like NTP and IP Address were Not in 5.1.2? It may mean that the davinci file is making the camera think its 5.1.2 when its really running 5.1.6.
Just to be sure I checked the firmware version and much to my surprise it is showing as 5.1.2 and NOT 5.1.6 as I would have thought. I had the test buttons that had been talked about so all was good. I logged into the camera and all looked good. I telneted in and uploaded the davinci file I had used in 5.1.2 and rebooted the camera. That being said, as soon as I logged out it went to all chinese.
We've reached out for comment, but we're sure the company has a few high profile clients it'll need to tend to first.I had installed version 5.1.2 and hacked the davinci file on my DS-2CD2532F-IWS and because of that I was able to download and install 5.1.6 from the european site without the region issue. Given the amount of info leaked, more revelations are still coming to light. The company's website is currently unreachable, and its Twitter account was hijacked at some point, too (though that looks to have been resolved). Civil rights groups have repeatedly expressed concern about Hacking Team's software falling into the hands of oppressive governments, something the firm has stated it takes measures to avoid. Other documents reportedly show the company told the UN it had no business dealings with Sudan, yet an invoice among the leaked files suggests otherwise. Privacy researcher Christopher Soghoian has parsed some of the files, revealing that Hacking Team's former customers include (among others) South Korea, Kazakhstan, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Chile, Oman, Lebanon, and Mongolia. This puts the agencies or governments using the software at risk, if the source code contains vulnerabilities. The leaked data are reported to include info such as emails, customer info, internal documents and source code. It's fair to say it's not popular with journalists and privacy advocates. Hacking Team is known for its controversial "Da Vinci" software that allows governments and law enforcement agencies to monitor encrypted communications such as email and Skype conversations, and collect evidence on citizens. Yet here we are, telling you about how the aforementioned organization has just seen 400GB of data pilfered from its servers, and put onto BitTorrent for all to see. When you call your enterprise "Hacking Team" you'd like to think you're pretty on top of that whole, well, hacking thing.