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>>107568585
"Arguing that you don't care about the right to privacy because you have nothing to hide is no different than saying you don't care about free speech because you have nothing to say."
--Edward Snowden

>Cyberpunk
The FAQ: https://sizeof.cat/post/cyberpunk-faq/
What is /cyb/erpunk?: https://pastebin.com/pmn9vzWZ
How do I into /cyb/erpunk?: https://pastebin.com/5tpNFQds
Huge list of cyberpunk media: https://sizeof.cat/post/cyberpunk/
The cyberdeck: https://pastebin.com/7fE4BVBg
Cyberlife: https://jinteki.industries/files/cyberlife.7z
Bibliothek: https://www.mediafire.com/folder/4m5hd2065hde8/Bibliothek

>Privacy
Tools: https://www.privacyguides.org/en/tools/
Hitchhiker's Guide: https://anonymousplanet.org/guide/
Hardware: https://ryf.fsf.org/products
Frontends: https://igwiki.lyci.de/wiki/Privacy_friendly_frontends
OSINT Guide: https://inteltechniques.com/index.html
Firmware: https://libreboot.org/
RMS on Facebook: https://stallman.org/facebook.html
Have I Been Pwned: https://haveibeenpwned.com/

>Security
"Shit just got real": https://pastebin.com/rqrLK6X0
Cybersecurity basics: https://igwiki.lyci.de/wiki/Cybersecurity_-_/sec/_guide
Basics and armory: https://igwiki.lyci.de/wiki/Cybersecurity_-_basics_and_armory
Learning/News/CTFs: https://igwiki.lyci.de/wiki/Cybersecurity_-_Learning/News/CTFs
/sec/ PDFs: https://mega.nz/#F!zGJT1QQQ!O-8yiH845GN26ajAvkoLkA
EFF Surveillance Self-Defense: https://ssd.eff.org/
Other library: https://mega.nz/file/UCgEGAjb#rwNcnMAQCUUbSp8supsFvn9QEHCWUW86eLcZa16ZG4Y
>>
>Recommended operating systems
General purpose: Debian, Fedora, Arch Linux, K/L/Xubuntu
Security focused: Qubes OS, Whonix, Tails, OpenBSD

>Recommended mobile operating systems
Android based: GrapheneOS, CalyxOS, LineageOS/DivestOS
Linux based: PureOS, postmarketOS

>Recommended browsers
Chromium based: Brave, Chromium (ungoogled)
Firefox based: Firefox, Waterfox, Tor Browser

>Advanced content blocking
https://github.com/gorhill/uBlock/wiki/Blocking-mode:-medium-mode

>Browser tests
https://www.deviceinfo.me
https://dnsleaktest.com
https://librespeed.org
https://privacytests.org
https://time.gov

>Privacy friendly frontends
https://wiki.installgentoo.com/wiki/Privacy_friendly_frontends

>Recommended search engines
Brave Search, DuckDuckGo, SearXNG, Startpage

>Privacy oriented DNS
https://adguard-dns.io/en/welcome.html
https://nextdns.io
https://www.quad9.net

>Privacy oriented email
Proton Mail, Tutanota, Mailbox.org, Riseup, Disroot

>Recommended instant messengers
Signal, Briar, Element, Session

>BIOS replacement
https://coreboot.org
https://libreboot.org
https://github.com/merge/skulls/tree/master

>Resources
https://anonymousplanet.org/guide/
https://ssd.eff.org
https://ffprofile.com
https://ryf.fsf.org/products
https://haveibeenpwned.com
https://inteltechniques.com/workbook.html
https://eldritchdata.neocities.org
https://www.privacyguides.org
https://sizeof.cat/links
https://stallman.org/facebook.html
https://chromium.woolyss.com
>>
https://www.thebignewsletter.com/p/how-wall-street-ruined-the-roomba

china will control the robots
>>
>>107601982
Guaranteed not to spy on you:
https://www.dyson.com/vacuum-cleaners/cordless/v15/detect-absolute-hepa-gold
>>
>general died again
>still on a discussion about room as
For fucks sake. I just got a robot vacuum and it's the best thing in my entire life. And no, I don't give a single shred of a fuck about China spying on me. Some of you have never downloaded child pornography in your life and it shows due to how retardedly schizo you are about the wrong things in your life

Now for some fake-white who was raped by a Chinese mans micropenis as a baby and that's what he blames his faggotry on to tell me that I did something wrong for saving hundreds of hours of my life over the next 4 years by spending 400 bucks and letting china look at my feet
>>
>>107602347

can i look at your feet
>>
do you think we're approaching a world where the advertisers will pay for the ai services so that instead of waiting 1 second for the ad bidding to finish before some pictures get displayed on our webpages, we wait 2-3 seconds and custom ai ads will be generated based on ad profiles?
>>
>>107603563

the cyberpunk future we deserve
>>
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>>107602347
>For fucks sake. I just got a robot vacuum and it's the best thing in my entire life.
Is it really that big of a change? I've been thinking of getting one of these but at the same time it only takes me about 5 minutes a day to vacuum my floors with a real vacuum. But I have noticed that my house accumulates dust way too fast so I basically have to vacuum every day or else my house becomes dustier than a fucking ash tray. Should I get an air filter so it can suck all the dust out of my air before it reaches the floor? It would also help with dust accumulation on non-floor surfaces as well
>>
Reposting the updated Data Broker Removal Links:
https://pastebin.com/YDP7yihg
https://pastebin.com/raw/YDP7yihg
>>
>>107602468
>can i look at your feet
No because opsec but also they're really gross
I'm excited to take lots of pictures and videos of my future daughters feet though. Literally the most ethical thing you can do, completely harmless/abuse-free and literally dozens of hours of effortless content over the course of years and you can share it all with the world too with some clever packaging

>>107607337
>Is it really that big of a change?
Yes. If you're mostly on one floor it's a life changer. No more manual vacuuming. It goes under our kitchen counters and beds and couches and tables too so it literally saves 10 minutes every 2 days. Vacuuming fucking sucks. I hate it. It also mops the floors too, and it's less quiet than a vacuum. Automatic carpet detection, automatic tangled wires detection it's great

Air filters/purifiers are tougher because it's tough to get a purifier that's actually doing something that's not annoyingly loud or powerful. You can do worse things with your money than spend it on attempting to improve your indoor air quality. I guess it's worth mentioning that the best thing you could ever do for your health is exercise so if you're not doing that then start
>>
>>107609047

you belong in prison
>>
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>>107609047
>Vacuuming fucking sucks. I hate it.
I've always enjoyed vacuuming and find it oddly relaxing. Something about hearing the dirt get sucked up and seeing the dust collect in the dirt tank always made me feel like pic related. I hate mopping though so I might get a machine for that. I also don't give a shit about Chinese spying as long as they're not selling my data to the west. All of the non-Chinese models are certainly selling your data to Israel and monitoring you for antisemitism 24/7.
>>
>>107607337
>Is it really that big of a change?
Yes. I bought one with my brother for our parents. My mother was sceptic, cleaning regularly with a normal vacuum. So we sent the robot on a 5 minute cleaning run, opened it up to show just how much it had found, which was far more than my mother had expected. Now it runs rather regularly, keeping the house clean.

>>107609047
>Air filters/purifiers
There is a lot of filth in city air, and you will be disturbed when you see how much a plain electrostatic filter pulls out of the air.
>>
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Sup /cyb/+/psg/, hope everyone's doing well.
I suppose you all heard the news about the recent french data breaches or hack or whatever is the most accurate term for this shitshow (Any updates on the situation is welcome as well)
How can you even protect yourself from this kind of stuff? Surely I'm not entirely retarded about privacy and security (at least that's what I'd like to think), but I'm a bit clueless on how to cope/go forward knowing most of my IRL details are all nicely sitting in a csv file along with millions of other's. If it was a random website or company I couldn't care less cause I wouldn't have given them my email let alone my name or phone number, but this is the fucking government and I can't do otherwise no matter how much I'd want to.
>>
Threadly reminder to go read Fisheye Placebo for more cyberpunk goodness!
>Vance just wanted to make the most out of his college experience under a totalitarian regime, and if that meant hacking into the university to assign himself a hot female roommate, then so be it. The last thing he expected was to be dragged into a crazy conspiracy to overthrow the government by his most-definitely-not-female roommate.

Archive
Chapter 1 Part 1
https://desuarchive.org/co/thread/138433030/
Chapter 4 Part 7 (latest)
https://desuarchive.org/co/thread/145447092/

https://www.yuumeiart.com/fisheye-placebo-chapters
>>
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Does anyone have any guides on achieving NSA tier cybersecurity?
Im already familiar with Michael Bazzell
>>
This evening's Solarpunk thread: >>>/a/284623316
>>
>>107615735

DoD dudes released a pipeline hanbook. I hope is useful for you.

https://www.dau.edu/sites/default/files/Migrated/CopDocuments/DoD%20Enterprise%20DevSecOps%202.0%20Fundamentals%20LHH.pdf
>>
I secure wiped my SSD from BIOS. it took like 3 seconds. how could it be this fast, isn't it supposed to take at least several minutes? it's a Crucial 1GB.
>>
>>107602347
Does the roomba spy on you?
>>
I need to know why shinyhunters keeps scanning my network
im competent enough to stop them, but they won't let meeee :(
>>
What's the point of brave browser if on android (and everything else really) all your keystrokes are tracked and all your metadata is tracked because of how the OS and hardware is bult regardless of what you uninstall or disable. The most disgusting, the most disturbing, the most incriminating things that you have searched up, downloaded or typed out even if you didn't send has been tracked by google or by some other corporation or agency, it's recorded on some server. Now imagine everyone you ever knew or saw read and saw those things those things.
>>
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Recently learned about “Flock Cameras”, how are you supposed to combat this besides asking the local government to removed them, hoping they are not morally corrupt?
>>
>>107618141
What about dove cameras?
>>
>>107618141
Memorize where they are, mask up and hop on your bike at 2 AM and smash a few of them up with a baseball bat
>>
What are your plans for this week, anon?
>>
>>107618141

request as much as you can. try to find cops driving without license plates and local politicians cheating on their wives. figure out the locations and see what you can find. hopefully you have public records laws.
>>
>>107618141
>flock cameras
I haven't finished watching the video, but I think this guy here shows you how to hack into the cameras and mess with them. If you know a bit of programming it should be easy enough to break into them and do something, the secops on them is ridiculous
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uB0gr7Fh6lY
>>
>>107617588
proof?

shinyhunters hacked soundcloud recently? do you work for them or mixpanel?
>>
>>107618141
Max out on normcore, use a bike without visible license plates, wear generic clothes, use minimalistic phone and turn off cell phone during travels by brownout to avoide suspicion.
>>
>>107601582
are there imageboards or textboards on i2p?
>>
>>107612102
>How can you even protect yourself from this kind of stuff?
Don't interact with the government at all.
>but that's impossible!
Yep, that's the point. Welcome to digital society.
>>
>>107612102
>How can you even protect yourself from this kind of stuff?
Literally the only way is to vote your way into governments not incompetent enough to fuck everything up in the first place, but chudcels will never want to hear this because they support such governments, and anarkiddies will never want to hear this because it reminds them that revolutionary LARPing doesn't create good societies.
>>
>>107624456
I haven't really heard any details on what services are on i2p or even about any index for that protocol.
>>
=== /sec/ News:
>Newer RISC-V CPUs Vulnerable To Spectre V1 - Linux Mitigation Patches Posted
https://www.phoronix.com/news/Spectre-V1-RISC-V-Patches
>Spectre V1 as a reminder is the variant for Bounds Check Bypass with CPU speculative execution in conditional branches. The Linux kernel RISC-V code hasn't seen Spectre V1 protections since earlier more basic RISC-V core designs have been immune to Variant One and other Spectre vulnerabilities. But newer more complex RISC-V core designs are bringing some of the same challenges exhibited on x86_64 and AArch64 architectures.
>>
Updated Firefox Zero user.js
https://pastebin.com/PRQyRv6x
https://pastebin.com/raw/PRQyRv6x
>>
What are good ways to master hacking in 2 weeks and become a legend like Linus Torvalds or Mitnick? Consider sleeping as optional
>>
>>107628300
if you have 3k usd, pay for OSCP. 1 year of study material + labs
>>
>>107629022
Worth it definitely
>>
anyone used phreeli
>>
>>107628300
>or Mitnick
Not advicable, he is dead.
There is no quick way but instead a long, long journey. Get yourself an effective apprenticeship by joining a young project such as SerenityOS. Linux is too old and set with far too much historical luggage.
>>
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note to self: don't give up
>>
>>107628300

>2 weeks

ask the fbi
>>
>>107628300
What country? Most Western countries are adding a lot of people in the military and intelligence agencies. You can get a job there provided your record is clean.
>>
>>107601704
>Signal, Briar, Element, Session
Jami, Briar, SimpleX, Session
here, fixed. (centralization is cancer)
>>
>>107631735

Based. Keep going.
>>
>>107634561
It took me years to get everyone I know on Signal, I'm not repeating that process for some niche app that nobody uses.
>>
What do you think of Matrix, anon?
>>107608368
>>
>>107631591
Also Mitnick was a social engineer. The real masters are Wozniak, Captain Crunch, Richard Stallman AND Donald Knuth.
>>
>>107635373
Rebecca my beloved.
>>
>>107635662
May be probably the best cyberpunk character available.
>>
>>107628300
Just say you are the best until enough suckers believe you to destroy entire threads. That worked for Elon Musk.
>>
>>107635651
>Wozniak
The Woz was a master at 6502 programming and digital design. Today a better approach is learning VHDL/Verilog and get a gigatron for learning.
>>
>>107635206
Fair enough, but don't go around advertising it as "private". Encrypted? Yes, absolutely; but private? Well... It depends.
https://arxiv.org/abs/2411.11194
>Careless Whisper: Exploiting Silent Delivery Receipts to Monitor Users on Mobile Instant Messengers
+ https://desuarchive.org/g/thread/107313561/
>>
>>107601704
>Element

Funny you should say that >>107608368
>>
>>107637534
It is private. This issue could affect many encrypted messaging apps, not just Signal. For the average threat model, it's more than private and secure. If you're being targeted by a nation state, then you would definitely want to use different means of communication.
>>
>>107638489
What would work if targeted by a nation-state?
>>
>>107640832
carrier pigeons
>>
>>107640960
I can see those getting easily intercepted
>>
>>107641145

not if the messages are rot-13 encrypted
>>
>>107640832
Bin Laden used motorcycle couriers and was able to evade CIA for years.
>>
>>107643331

the satellites can only track what they know to track and can't cover all the roads all the time. humint is still king.
>>
>>107640832
good old PGP encrypted email
>>
>>107643392
For many decades, satellites have produced far more output than agencies have had human resources to interpret. Sure, there are automation, motion triggering, AI and more but that is no match for a human image analyst.
>>
How does Google track my Youtube watch history across devices that aren't signed in, have never been on the same network, or have never been within a mile of each other?

At home, I have my "bed phone", an old no-sim android with 99% of features disabled used almost exclusively to fall asleep listening to YT videos using Brave. The device never leaves home and has never signed into YT.
My daily driver phone is on graphene with everything disabled, including mobile data, used exclusively for phone calls. paid VPN turned on 24/7 just in case.

Often I'll visit a friend and watch Youtube on TV through their Roku box using the guest account. The types of videos I watch at their house are completely different topics than what I watch at home. I have never connected my phone to their network.
When I go home, the videos I watched on my friend's Roku guest account will immediately start showing up on my no-sim, home-only, signed-out phone. What the fuck?
I also have a general use hardwired linux box at home, 24/7 vpn+different privacy browser, only rarely watch maybe 1-2 YT vids a week about a specialty topic. Those videos will also start showing up in the algorithm on my no-sim home phone.
>>
>>107646329
Wait, so you're
>using different devices
>on different networks
>with different watch habits
>without accounts
And still being tracked?
Something here doesn't... track. Surely you're missing someting. Maybe watching similar videos on the two phones? Idk, but something's missing
>>
>>107646329
>android
Android is loaded to the hilt with tracking features such as geographic tracking. Google has probably correlated you with all your phones.
>>
>>107613208
When are we getting new chapters?
>>
>>107647548
Unknown, could take some time: >>107542971
>>
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You DO only install trustworthy extensions, right /psg/?

https://arstechnica.com/security/2025/12/browser-extensions-with-8-million-users-collect-extended-ai-conversations/
>>
>>107649823
>install trustworthy extensions
NEVER
I install extensions who's name I cannot even read from random korean piracy forums , exclusively.
>>
>>107631735
hows the advent going? i've only been able to complete one of the sidequests.
>>
is firefox ok
>>
>>107644429

they can't cover all the square mileage all the time. outside of the chinese ones, they look straight down.
>>
>>107635373
>federated -> user might be randomly banned by instance jannies at any time
Jami doesn't have this issue
Session doesn't have this issue
Briar doesn't have this issue
Simplex doesn't have this issue
>>
>>107653642
>outside of the chinese ones, they look straight down.
I don't think you know much about this at all and probably you thing SAR is a misspeled Indian concept.
>>
>>107654546

which spy satellites have rotating cameras? the chinese have them.
>>
>>107653712
Why don't more people use those alternatives then?
>>
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>>107653478
How would it? When it was made by Google and supported to avoid monopoly arguments, while kept inferior and trannified on purpose.
Its almost as bad as Chrome. Be strong, Be Brave
>>
>>107635651
How much time did it take for them to reach such level of skill?
>>
>>107656060

check out dave aitel, charlie miller, mark dowd and orange tsai. they're very good.
>>
>>107616562
>I secure wiped my SSD from BIOS. it took like 3 seconds. how could it be this fast, isn't it supposed to take at least several minutes? it's a Crucial 1GB.
do you mean 1TB?
it's done "in hardware", but you shouldn't trust that shit.
an analogy: in some cases software sends commands to simply "delete" encryption keys from SSDs, but there is research that shows that "hardware encrypted" data can be recovered, and keys are reused or insecure keys are used once and once again.
just run dban or
dd if=/dev/urandom of=/dev/your-ssd
>>
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Currently reading pic related and really enjoying it. Learning how to build my own containers just with bash commands, learning about all the internals. Haven't had this much fun in a while. It's only 200 pages, absolutely recommended for anyone interested.

Btw, is there ctf but for containers? There used to be such a site but it's no longer working.
>>
>>107656618
Looks interesting. I will take a look into it. Thanks, for the recommendation.
>>
>>107656060
All day everyday
>>
What does SOCKS or SOCK5 do?
>>
>>107655398
They do. Simplex has 8x the ammountbof active users.
>>
>>107656180
How did they get so good? Did they study all day?
>>
>>107659479

of course. how else do you get good?
>>
I regret selling 0days to my gov, I was naive and young, got an internship at a VR company and just got caught in the system.
I got ground to a pulp and shat out the other end with a conscience.
I wish I learned how to actually build things instead of breaking them.
I think about the people I indirectly hurt everyday.
Don't make the mistake I made, take your skills and actually help people.
>>
>>107660701

>i made millions hacking poor countries so rich assholes running my government could exploit poor people at home and abroad while giving little back
>>
>>107660810
How do you deal with it ? I gave most of my money to truly good people but the need to puke never went away.
>>
>>107660957
Also who is even good nowadays?
>>
>>107660957

Working for the system is not intrinsically evil. In my particular case I work in a blue team and I am proud of protecting people.

You need a redemption arc. It's hard work, but some people have pulled it off in the past without the inconvenient optional step of dying.

Best success to you.
>>
Remember to employ sensible security practices this Christmas, /psg/
>Don't install software from questionable sources
>Don't use hardware from malicious countries
>Don't visit links with questionable domains
>>
>>107654741
Irrelevant. And rotate? You mean pan and tilt?
This analysis shows the US imagery at an angle and how it was determined.
https://sattrackcam.blogspot.com/2019/09/image-from-trump-tweet-identified-as.html
>>
>>107663436

>don't install software from questionable sources
basically everyone should read the code that is installing in their system units.

>nobody has time for that
I know, that's why God invented static analysis, anon.
>>
mods deleted the discussion about the "redacted" PDF files with recoverable text: https://desuarchive.org/g/thread/107644199
>>
>>107629022
OSCP will teach you the basics but don't think you'll become a master from exploiting weak creds, simple AD misconfigs, and CVEs straight from exploit-db. Learn to hack real systems and software.
>>
>>107646329
You are being tracked via the stock android and while your graphene phone has a vpn, I am assuming your home modem does not. Google is a bot network so they will log the device type, Home wifi, network preferences, and then log whatever data the cell towers are providing.
>>
>>107665533
This is glowtown.

inb4 the /cyb/ incident
>>
is there any point in learning C in the current year, or should I dedicate that effort to learning Rust instead? Thinking of it in terms of being able to do some low-level programing (I do Go/C# for high-level)
>>
>>107666378
The mods are very uneven in what they accept. A thread can potter along for more than a day and then all of a sudden it is gone

>>107666488
Sure, there is an enormous base of C software out there. Rust is endless promises never fulfilled. That is why Redox-OS after 10 years is nowhere near what Linux was after 4 years.
The volume also means that AI is better for boilerplate stuff than fr Rust, simply because the training material for C is vastly greater and more varied than for Rust.
>>
>>107666709
Agreed, C exists and can be understood and hacked. I still don't understand what niche Rust satisfies
>>
Kind of /cyb/ vibes:
https://www.webtoons.com/en/sf/seed/list?title_no=1480
Unfortunately, many of the episodes are behind a paywall.
>>
>>107667445
>C exists and can be understood and hacked.
definitely, but this is a red team mentality, and I'm more into blue team, that is, building tools to detect, prevent and respond to attacks.
>>
>>107667445
Rust attempts to sell itsef as an inherently safe programming language that should produce software that is safer and therefore quicker to develop. That at least was the theory.
Redox-OS shows the hype didn't hold.
>>
>>107664551

https://www.scmp.com/news/china/science/article/3299346/chinese-scientists-build-worlds-most-powerful-spy-camera
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/science/article/3161178/nimble-chinese-satellite-grabs-hi-res-images-us-city-seconds
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ja2bKbp6I-g
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UZctvA6MAUk

seems like the chinese can do things others can't. keyhole is old tech.
>>
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today I learned the term "man in the middle" attack was removed from educational material and other descriptions for political correctness
>>
>>107667677
Yeah I see no point on the language as it is
>>
>>107633071
If the only record I have is a speeding fine am I still good enough for the glownigger career?
>>
>>107669535
>speeding fine
Probably not a problem. Pot would be a problem, even if Clinton, Obama and no doubt other presidents also used pot.
>>
>>107634561
I just use RCS. It just works. I think it's only end-to-end encrypted if you're messaging between Android and Android, but I'm messaging from my Android phone to a bunch of iPhones (most people I know have iPhones), and I don't think it's encrypted in that situation.

Who cares though. My texts aren't very interesting. If someone can read them then I'm not too bothered.
>>
>>107672078
>RCS
isn't that federated? into the >>>/trash/ (>>107653712)
>>
Any fans of ham radio?
>>
>>107673471
I'm a fan of software-defined radio
>>
>>107673890
What do you like about it?
>>
>>107672078
>Who cares though. My texts aren't very interesting. If someone can read them then I'm not too bothered.
That includes your bank statements? Also, intelligence is also about secondary sources, picture of you with interesting people in the abckground.

>>107673471
Sure.
The >>>/diy/ham FAQ originated in this general, and has evolved a lot since then, complete with a huge library.
>>
>>107672078
>4th worlder jew worshipping scum still relies on SMS, fucking SMS
Lmfao
>>
>>107674850
I like that you can create signals in a wide range of frequencies with a computer.
>>
>>107675966
>wide range of frequencies
https://github.com/F5OEO/rpitx
> It can handle frequencies from 5 KHz up to 1500 MHz.
It is crucial that you use correct filtering before thinking about going on the air with this, or harmonics will splatter across important bands such as rescue frequencies.
>>
>>107601582
does firefox come with any spyware that cant be circumvented? i have arkenfox on it and use gentoo or should i use librewolf? or chromium? havent been online quite some time, heard theres gonna be sum AI integration into firefox sohuld i even keep updating it?

also what should i rather use apparmor or firejail? firejail just broke portage and had to turn it off, selinux is kinda too scary for me noob.
>>
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>>107676303
Yes, firefox or trannyfox as its also known is nothing but spyware. Instead, come home white man.
>>
>>107676145
I don't know shot about that. can you teach me more? how do I filter stuff if I don't know basic electronics?
I don't have high power stuff, btw. just a few basic SDRs and nothing else, just for fun.

>>107676303
attach a proxy to firefox, add your proxy certificate to it and you'll see the HTTP requests that firefox sends home.
you can bypass that shit by adding the list of domains to your /etc/hosts
>>
>>107612102
Don't give your information to the government. Good luck surviving the EU police state in the coming decades
>>
Have a bump, bump back for an adjacent but different topic:
>>107677577

Basically, color hacks your brain, unhack your brain.
>>
>>107624456
>>107625813
>notbob.i2p
>>
>>107631591
Stupid question, I know, but are there other projects like this? I wanted to get involved in Ladybird but web browsers and C++ aren't really my thing
>>
>>107679087
>https://versiondb.io/
cool project, can you share a bit of the underlying tech you used? And can you share some interesting sites you found and we'll go look them up on your site?
>>
>>107679087
also it would be cool if you could scan domains that people type on the search bar if you haven't already done so. Maybe with a message like "I'm sorry, x site is not on our database, but we're working hard to get it for you and it will be ready in x time"
>>
>>107675279
>That includes your bank statements?
No, I don't send bank statements over RCS. RCS is the new version of SMS, with upgraded features. So I use RCS for texting friends and family. Saying things like "Merry Christmas" and "see you at 2pm" and whatever.

>>107675362
RCS is different from SMS. Also I never mentioned Jews, you schizo.
>>
>>107680643
>can you share a bit of the underlying tech you used?
Sure. The VersionDB site has just over 84k pages. I'm using Hugo to generate all the pages for it. In terms of page volume, it's easily the biggest site I've deployed. There isn't a back-end (i.e. no HTTP API, no database, etc.) and the search functionality is happening locally on you machine. The reason is because I had wanted to reduce the moving parts this website had. Less moving parts, less bottlenecks, less things to break. Now you can zip through the site no problem. Static site generators are criminally underrated these days.

For how I'm detecting the technologies, I'm using fingerprints taken from the following repositories:

https://github.com/HTTPArchive/wappalyzer
https://github.com/enthec/webappanalyzer

I take those and hit up CommonCrawl, that saves me building out my own crawling infrastructure in the early days.

>can you share some interesting sites you found and we'll go look them up on your site?
The sites using waaaaay outdated tech (e.g. PHP 5.x.x) tend to be time capsules written by Boomer devs of yesteryear. It's pretty fun going on safari and seeing what's here.
>>
any projects that would benefit from running in a portable lab (like a raspberry pi on my backpack as I walk around the city)? What capabilities does mobility offer as opposed to just staying in my apartment?
>>
>>107601582
>OSINT Guide
>need to buy some shit
you have been spotted
Game is over...
>>
>>107678596
SerenityOS has a lot of sub components you could focus on, or you could work on porting third party software to this platform, see
https://github.com/SerenityOS/serenity/tree/master/Ports
For deeply low level stuff, there is gigatron.io where you can even rewrite the microcode.
>>
Anyone got more clips from the future we have all deserved, loike this?
https://www.deviantart.com/latexspacebabes/art/Welcome-To-The-Citadel-Home-Of-The-Space-Babes-1272923135
>>
>>107682950
What are the coolest projects for a wanna be hacker to focus on?
>>
>>107682713
OSINT and certs are for pussies anyway. Real hackers just hack
>>
>>107681991
There is war driving/walking/cycling of course. Also, i fyou use radio, you may want to reach a position with good coverage.
>>
What is the most cyb outfit you have, anon?
>>
>>107687338
Adidas tracksuit.
>>
>>107687371
Seems like you want to be isekaied, anon
>>
>>107681991
Sometimes I clip a heltec to my backpack before going on a walk just to see if there's any new meshtastic nodes in my area. I don't need an rpi for that though it just connects to my phone.
>>
>>107688524
That's pretty interesting, anon. Does it work?
>>
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I wonder if Chinese tech is bad for security. Pic related.
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>>107678200
>I don't know shot about that. can you teach me more?
HArd to do remote like this, the simplest way is to check out the OP txt in >>>/diy/ham where there are textbooks that tell you how to do this. You can also go for a /ham/ license, older mentors (called "elmers") can help a lot.
> how do I filter stuff if I don't know basic electronics?
You need to determine the frequency you want to operate on, the bandwidth you need and then enter this in a web based design system (plenty out there) and find the values for capacitors (you buy) and inductors (that you wind yourself) and just build the thing. Assume minimum 4 inductors.
>I don't have high power stuff, btw. just a few basic SDRs and nothing else, just for fun.
Even a milliwatt RF signal can be heard on different continents.
>>
>>107687371
They launched a line of tracksuits and leotards - made of latex. It was all sold out in minutes.
>>
=== /sec/ News:
>A DISCUSSION ON HOW WIFI CAN BE USED TO SEE THROUGH WALLS
https://www.rtl-sdr.com/a-discussion-on-how-wifi-can-be-used-to-see-through-walls/
>Using low-cost SDRs, a standard PC, an NVIDIA GPU, and open-source AI tools like DensePose, researchers can reconstruct basic 3D human shapes in real time. In some cases, the system does not even need to transmit its own signal. It can passively analyze reflections from an existing Wi-Fi router already operating in the home.
>>
>>107692311
That's fascinating, kind of like a bat
>>
>>107692311
can hackers fuck your mom? maybe, but they would need to leave their rooms.
>>
>>107633071
in America if you get a good enough asvab score, the recruiters will shove navy Nuke down your throat. don't listen to them and insist on getting into CWT (cyber warfare training). go to the navy or air force for cwt. easiest way to get a top secret clearance
>>
>>107691163

I never use Chinese products. I have gone to great lengths to purchase only machinery designed and assembled in the US or EVROPA.

It gets harder every year.

My best purchase, by far, is my beloved old IBM System X server. I love it. A great machine from a better era when the burger were actually based.

Man, I miss those burgers.
>>
>>107694175
If WWIII breaks out in 2029 as some suggest, this might be a good time to plan your military career.
>>
>>107694175
I know some brits who did cwt in the UK, they've been out for a while and now are just making bank in the private sector. Wish I had thought of that back when I was young
>>
>>107691384
>line of tracksuits and leotards - made of latex
To wit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xpEHEPQ4Ud8
(no nudity)
>>
>>107694183
>I never use Chinese products. I have gone to great lengths to purchase only machinery designed and assembled in the US or EVROPA.
Interesting. What about stuff made by the Japanese, South Koreans, and Taiwanese? Those places are friendly with the US and Europe
>>
>>107695213
I looked for japanese products. Unfortunately, they don't produce anything anymore.
>>
>>107694728

no one in america is joining up to fight ww3
>>
>>107689971
>Does it work
The heltec? Yeah it works to find new nodes but most of the time it's just the same router nodes in my area.
I want to get a couple solar powered wismesh repeaters, hook one up at home and the other in my truck. I go offroading with friends a lot but sometimes we miss radio callouts and it gets messy. I want a text communication channel just between us that doesn't need internet or satellite.
Plus the heltecs can send gps data which could help finding someone that gets hurt and can't talk on a radio.
>>
>>107695782
You will simply be called up.
When China enters Taiwan, North Korea enters South Korea, Russia invades Poland, someone bombs Tel Aviv so Israel for sure nukes Baghdad, Tehran and Islamabad, you will not be given and choice in the matter.
>>
>>107695968

there is no draft and people can be conscientious objectors. welcome to america.
>>
>>107696280
Anon, do you know who is in the White House these days?
>>
>>107695213
God, the old Japanese hardware was so good. You could fix pretty much everything from there trivially compared to shit from the USA and Europe.
>>
>>107696738

Back in the day the industry created things to last and be maintainable by their owners. Everything started to decay the moment that principle was abandoned.
>>
>>107696565

anon, do you know how unpopular he is? people join the military to get benefits or kill people. that's why cybsec says join up to get a ts-sci clearance and hack the chinese or russians.
>>
>>107696738

enshitification has taken over everything
>>
>>107696803
>>107696768
I think culture still maintains some quality on their products. I still buy mostly Japanese for my utilities and truth is that I had no buy regrets and got stuff for over a decade.
>>
>>107672078
>>107681950
>Who cares though. My texts aren't very interesting. If someone can read them then I'm not too bothered.
>So I use RCS for texting friends and family. Saying things like "Merry Christmas" and "see you at 2pm" and whatever.
How do people still fall for the irrelevant information meme? ALL of your information is relevant for building a profile on you. The ideal of modern governments and corporations is to predict your moves perfectly, even before you know about them yourself, so they can control you.

>>107696280
They'll just ignore your "conscientious objection".
>>
>>107696792
>trump favorability 43.4
https://www.realclearpolling.com/polls/favorability/donald-trump
>democrat party favorability 32.5
https://www.realclearpolling.com/polls/favorability/democratic-party
kek
>>
>>107691163
Is it any worse than any other technology?
>>
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I use KeepAssXC currently but also put that vault inside another encrypted container. Is this too over the top and paranoid? Is XC's encryption enough? Because currently this double process feels like a pain in the ass.
>>
>>107660701
if you could start over, what would you do? would you do bug bounties instead?
>>
back in the day, when I was a young student I went the whole nine yards playing with cyberpunk clothing. Goretex jackets, pants with straps leading nowhere, and a long weird list of accessories.

After years assembling different outfits and fighting over the small sizes of clothes because all the shit came from China, I learned the best cyberpunk clothing has to comply with three basic requirements

>real /cyb/ clothing has to be cheap
The /cyb/ spirit is about having a low life where you live with essential basics, you have to spend on clothing when it is an absolute necessity and not for a fashion statement.

>everything you wear has to be made of good materials made to endure hard environments.
the idea of the genre is that you wear based on pragmatics, the first thing it has to do is to protect you and be comfy

>you have to feel natural inside the context you are in wearing your clothes
artists like scarlxrd, that use techwear or cyberwear look good in front on the cameras with black parkas and wearing tactical vests on top of it, but if you try that kind of outfit in the real world, you are going to feel like a dark clown, it makes no sense to stand out unnecessarily and feel out of place

and the most important lesson of all

>techwear dies in summer

>so what do I do?
You need to compose your clothing from the stacks you can get from the salvation army, search for what has quality materials and feels natural to you and looks normal under any circumstance. If it seems old, that clothing has passed the test of time and will stay with you no problem for a long time.

Basically Hobocore/Greyman is the closest thing to the real life /cyb/ spirit, you are not going to get the real thing from high end brands such as ACRONYM and stuff like that.

TL;DR
I was actually able to pull off some /cyb/ accessories but you first have to develop fundamentals about wearing things that really make actual sense in the real world.
>>
>>107649823
>Israel
Lol
>>
>>107649823
>>
>>107697018

https://www.natesilver.net/p/trump-approval-ratings-nate-silver-bulletin

dems are doing worse because they didn't stop him. no one joins the military for the mission, they want clearances and training.
>>
>>107695423
>I looked for japanese products. Unfortunately, they don't produce anything anymore.
They do produce many things but not so much consumer goods anymore.

>>107696738
Back in the day, Japanese companies made junk and reputation was so bad that companies set up "headquarters" in the Japanese city Usa just so that they could claim it was "Made in Usa" which takes desperation to a new level.
They realised that this had no future and invited quality assurance experts such as Deming and Juran to teach them how things should be done. These experts had limited success in the West but Japan was always immune to culture shock and accepted the new wisdom. That is when quality climed out of the garbge tip. Next they built on this and created Tanguchi Method, Kaizen, TPM and more, and Japan started looking like an unstoppable juggernaut. Then they added design for production, design for maintenance, design for recycling and more, which are the reasons why Japanese products could be maintained well.
Unfortunately, nothing lasts forever and in the 90s the bubble burst and also quality took a hit.

t.former quality auditor
>>
>>107700206
Didn't you have to commit sudoku if the Nintendo you manufactured red ringed?
>>
>>107700310
No. I did quality auditing in a NATO defence company. It was a great way to become unpopular, bearer of bad news and all that. We had to learn about the field before we could start auditing, and Japan was still a source of knowledge. The US was less interested in quality and I was not surprised to learn from GAO that F-35 had suffered a regression in the radar software suite. And that is far closer to capital offence than a red ring. GAO has also published MTBF info that is rather disturbing. F-35 is a hangar queen that one week into WWIII would all be grounded waiting for spare parts that are no longer on the shelves.
>>
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>>107699752
>nate silver
>>
>>107698775
I like the idea you present anon, I think techwear has been an attempt by companies to commercialize what is essentially their opposite. A true /cyb/ wears low life hacker stuff
>>
>>107701358
There are some tech aspects that can be useful but are certainly not visible from the outside, such as radiation protection mesh.
>>
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2025/12/drone-first-responder-programs-2025-review

>Drone as first responder (DFR) adoption really took off in 2025. Though the concept has been around since 2018, this year saw more normalization of the technology, its integration into more real-time crime center structures, and the implementation of automated deployment of drones.

>A DFR program features a fleet of camera-equipped drones, which can range from just a couple to dozens or more. These are deployed from a launch pad in response to 911 calls and other calls for service, sometimes operated by a drone pilot or, increasingly, autonomously directed to the call location. The appeal is the promise of increased “situational awareness” for officers headed to a call. This video offers a short explanation of DFR, and for a list of all of the cities we know use drones, including DFR programs, check out EFF’s Atlas of Surveillance.
>>
Am I retarded for going over several times if I trust Thunderbird with credentials for two emails more or less than having the yahoo and Gmail apps on my phone?

I don't use password managers or anything like that so getting an email client i guess is a hurdle of trust
>>
>>107700534
Have you ever considered bringing this up on /k/?

Problem is that the F35 is such a hotbutton topic its hard to tell who is shilling who.
>>
>>107703210
>Have you ever considered bringing this up on /k/?
I have browsed /k/ and the noise level is too high for me.
>Problem is that the F35 is such a hotbutton topic its hard to tell who is shilling who.
True. There is so much money in that project and so much financial engineering that the project simply cannot be killed. A lot of the things developed for F-35 could have been tested and even back ported to F-16, F-15 and F-18 which would have reduced risks and costs a lot by parallel and incremental development, but they never did that.
>>
>>107703210
Oh, and one more thing: the F-47 project is a last gasp of insanity in a world where the war in Ukraine has shown that drones is where it is at. A missile can pull 30 G in a turn, a pilot would be mush in boots, assuming the wings are not ripped off.
>>
While your bosses pressure you to deploy into production as fast as possible, the threats against your code are nameless, shapeless, can come from anywhere, and be effectively undetectable until the damage is already done.

It seems that the only language that allows those at the top to understand a point is that of direct and decisive violence against the integrity of their assets and interests. Until there is a cultural shift that allows security to be understood as a tool for building trust, this sad state of affairs will continue.
>>
>>107646329
I had a (sort of) similar experience.
>graphene
>private space w/ always-on mullvad VPN w/ daita for casual browsing/shitposting over ironfox
>owner profile/bare IP/vanadium for signed in accounts and stuff. Sometimes just browse reddit (not signed in or anything) there when feeling lazy. Literally just r/All, not pulling up specific subs or anything
>one day (private space, VPN, ironfox) spend time on /biz/, do a couple of crypto related searches, visit a couple crypto websites
>boom, suddenly crypto adds on reddit/bare IP/vanadium/owner profile
Like I know VPNs aren't a silver bullet or anything, but figured different IP/browser combos across profiles on Graphene should at least shake advertisers but I guess fucking not.
>>
>>107705679
Forgot to mention not even using play services
>>
>>107705221
I think the Ubisoft hack is related to MongoBleed, a critical vulnerability where the PoC was published on Christmas day. If you got savaged by this recently, I'm not going to hold it against you.
>>
>>107646329
>>107705679
do you use the same wifi or internet connection?
if you use the same internet connection, your IP might be a static one, in which case your apps might simply keep track of you by correlating all similar cookies and stuff.
try clearing your cookies and app data more often in your phones/devices
also,
>VPN
VPNs leak info sometimes.
also, check this attack: https://localmess.github.io/ . yes, that was Facebook.
>>
>>107646329
>>107705679
>>107705990
also, read this shit:
https://krebsonsecurity.com/2024/10/the-global-surveillance-free-for-all-in-mobile-ad-data/
https://timsh.org/tracking-myself-down-through-in-app-ads/
the first article has some mitigation measures.
>>
Any fans of gothic worlds like those of Coffin of Andy and Leyley? I think they'd be better than our current /cyb/ dystopia. Could they be classified as modern analog cyberpunk?
>>
>>107707096
Maybe if it was more high tech it would count
>>
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>>107698681
>no replies
Nice one lads.
>>
>>107698775
>Basically Hobocore/Greyman is the closest thing to the real life /cyb/ spirit,
I keep on saying this,
Techwear and Latex are more a fetish than a realistic fashion sense for people into that.
Privacy is all about blending and not looking obnoxious.
>>
>>107705990
I clearly need an iphone
>>
>>107707070
Not a bad idea to just setup a VPN at the router level, then Android can leak all it wants and still have it go through the VPN.
>>
>>107708171
In the future world of Eudemon, everyone will be in latex catsuits.
>>
>>107709975
Meow!!
>>
>>107708164
No one replied because you didn't share your threat model. What are you encrypting and who are your adversaries? Are you so passionate for the beauty of children that you're willing to sit in jail for 2 years because you didn't provide decryption keys? If you're not, then you're screwed if the glowies get physical access to your systems anyways since if they want you, they'll just plant whatever you're trying to hide/get away with anyways
>>
>>107698681
>>107708164
>use KeepAssXC currently but also put that vault inside another encrypted container. Is this too over the top and paranoid?
being paranoid is not bad, but how are you accessing the container itself? what's the point of putting the DB in another container? what's the threat model here?
say, if you are accessing it after gaining root, then yeah, I guess it's a good idea because you are adding an extra protection (assuming the file is only modifiable and accessable by root) & auth level. but if not... then it might be a useless effort, since the DB is already encrypted, and an attacker who has access to the file can simply corrupt it.
I suggest you to read this: https://keepassxc.org/blog/2023-06-20-cve-202335866/
but also have in mind that, depending on your desktop environment, an attacker who has local can also modify the behavior of the graphics programs and to your keyboard, and so could steal your password or do stuff with your DB.
>>
>>107698681
I just write all my passwords with pencil and paper. If glowies can physical access the safe I put it in I have more problems than I can solve.
>>
>>107711882
If you can't remember all of your passwords then you have terrible memory and/or too many accounts.
>>
>>107711882
*physically
>>
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>>107712072
>too many accounts.
Which is more common nowadays
>>
>>107712072
>too many accounts goy just use your social media account to connect everything for SSO and allow us to track you further
>>
>>107713235
or better yet, just don't sign up for a lot of shit, I'm down to just 5 accounts
>>
>>107713281
your life must be so much fun
>>
>>107714202
you will never know the true peace of digital minimalism
>>
>>107715294
This so much, why do people need so many accounts anyway? I like 4chin precisely because of this
>>
>>107712477
is this real? jfc
>>
>literally no mention of the CCC in this thread
/sec/ is dead.
>>
What do you plan to hack next year, anon?
>>
>>107717587
Israeli companies and institutions
>>
>>107713281
How are you down to 5 accounts while owning a house and car? You lie unless you are dubiously employed.
>>
Any anons make malware? Any tips not from GPT you wanna give to a beginner/novice?
>>
>>107717628

lots of exploits and rootkits hanging out there
>>
>>107717587
My freezer. I plan to adjust the settings so that it uses most of the electricity when the power is cheap and none during the most expensive hour of the day. I was also gifted a few solar panels that I plan to wire in on a separate low voltage DC circuit, thus avoiding use of electricians.
>>
>>107718103
If you have to ask don't bother.
>>
>>107717587
my wrists
>>
>>107718096
I don't own a house, and I highly doubt many people posting here do either. I do own a truck (that's paid off). My five accounts are email, bank, utilities, satellite radio, and lichess. I do have another email for work, but I don't consider it "mine" because it's owned by the organization I work for.
>>
=== /sec/ News:
>Cybersecurity Employees Plead Guilty To Ransomware Attacks
https://yro.slashdot.org/story/25/12/30/1911201/cybersecurity-employees-plead-guilty-to-ransomware-attacks
>Ryan Goldberg, a 40-year-old incident response manager from Georgia, and Kevin Martin, a 36-year-old ransomware negotiator from Texas, admitted to conspiring to obstruct commerce through extortion. Between April and December 2023, Goldberg, Martin, and a third unnamed co-conspirator deployed the ransomware against multiple U.S. victims and agreed to pay ALPHV BlackCat's operators a 20% cut of any ransoms received. They successfully extracted approximately $1.2 million in Bitcoin from one victim, splitting their 80% share three ways before laundering the proceeds. Both men face up to 20 years in prison and are scheduled for sentencing on March 12, 2026.
>>
>>107719706
>I was also gifted a few solar panels that I plan to wire in on a separate low voltage DC circuit, thus avoiding use of electricians.
anon, beware that DC behaves completely different to AC. high currents can get dangerous because the electrical flow doesn't stop the way it does with AC
>>
>>107720808
As long as it is below 42V you don't need an electrician. A 24V system is sufficient for my needs. In any case, as a licensed ham I am permitted to build and operate transmitters that use thousands of volts so I am familiar with the dangers of high voltages.
>>
https://madaidans-insecurities.github.io/linux.html
This guy says linux is not even as secure as winedows? What do?
>>
>>107720420
>conspiring to obstruct commerce through extortion.
damn, there goes my business idea
>>
>>107719778
Speaking of which, what happened to Lepht?
https://sapiensanonym.blogspot.com/
>>
>>107618141
There are ways, but they're not legal
>>
>>107717587
These chicken tendies, yum!
>>107719706
That's a really good starting project, just be careful with the AC/DC currents, they do not play well together.
>>
>>107721619
>4 y/o article
>madaidsaids
lmao
>>
>>107694868
That's really dumb, but I laughed when the girl went from wiping her crotch from a cloth to "Support me on Patreon". High-tech whoring is still whoring.
>>
>>107698775
The best cyberpunk clothing just blends in with normies. You don't want to be wearing a suit made entirely out of belts while playing with wifi
>>
>>107649823
I had to install an extension for taking remote tests during my medical training, and now it's still on this fucking laptop even though I deleted the extension. I'm going to have to reinstall the whole OS at some point, I'm just lazy.
>>
>>107720420
>Goldberg
Don't worry, Trump will pardon him at the behest of Alan Dershowitz and Mark Levin, just like the scammer that stole $1.6 billion.
>>
>>107717628
How are you going to get around Israel backdooring all new GPUs since nVidia is moving their factory to Tel Aviv? Just curious since Israel backdoored all Intel chips after Intel moved there, too. Not a single Intel chip has been safe since 2008.
>>
>>107723616
This video will help you with the backdoors.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RpXPYigzaiU
>>
>>107723616
Backdoors are inserted during design, before tapeout. I cannot see how you can add a backdoor during production.
>>
>>107723526
Women modelling latex are not really there to explore the finer aspects of cyberpunk fashion, sadly. And few seem to think of their own part in dystopia: when their looks is what brings in he money, the career will have to be short. I am not sure what is in the water in the US but female models and actresses age horrifically, at which point their career is over.

A female biohacker integrating body mods with a latex catsuit would be something, but unti then we can only dream.
>>
>>107724238
People who complain about "the joos" are usually not burdened with an over-abundance of schooling.
>>
>>107725162
>ignore your lying eyes
>>
>>107725497
Again, try reading >>107724238
It makes zero sense to claim fabs in Israel are adding backdoors.
>>
>>107721619

it's true tho. linux is pretty bad at security, but it's got privacy.
>>
>>107727112
A lot of the article is severely outdated. For example, all the issues surrounding X11 are irrelevant with the migration to Wayland.
>>
>>107602347
>it's the best thing in my entire life
that's so sad
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>>107727192
Only to non-hackers, to a real hacker being able to take control of his life and hours, and understanding a new device is the best feeling. Imagine hacking a roomba to make it give a better blowjob!
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>>107727690
How can I become a real high level hacker, anon?
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>Boomers finally getting privy to being spied on online
>This is 2 and a half decades after Snowden being sent to the Russian gulag and their porn being taken from them
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Is there any way to mass-delete private messages on Fagbook?
Is there a way to delete messages without FB sending a notification to the other person?
Is there a way to delete dms if you are blocked?
>>
Media is again clutching their communal pearls:
>The rise of singlehood is reshaping the world
Now, that is what they wanted, right?
https://archive.is/N1Qiv
>Among Americans aged 25-34, the proportion living without a spouse or partner has doubled in five decades, to 50% for men and 41% for women. Since 2010, the share of people living alone has risen in 26 out of 30 rich countries. By The Economist’s calculation, the world has at least 100m more single people today than if coupling rates were still as high as in 2017. A great relationship recession is under way.
Is someone losing money?
>Vogue, a fashion magazine, recently suggested that for cool, ambitious young women, having a boyfriend is not merely unnecessary but “embarrassing”.
Suggested? OK, so media got what they wanted. What could go wrong?
>Social media spread fears that women will be assaulted if they go out; and that men will be digitally shamed if a date goes badly.
Ground truths in current dystopia are being witheld, again one may wonder why.
>Perhaps the most important factor is that, as living alone has become easier, women’s standards have grown more exacting.
Women have standards, got it.
>More men are failing to clear this moving bar
Aha?
>One obvious idea is for men to grow up, do a little more housework, behave more responsibly and so turn themselves into more desirable partners.
Blame is apportioned, got it. Now, what will the future offer?
>It is also possible that the relationship recession will not correct itself. A striking 7% of young singles say they would consider a robo-romance with an AI companion, and these lovebots will only get more sophisticated. AI, after all, is patient; AI is kind; it does not ask you to clean the bathroom or get a better job.
More blame, I guess we should have known. And in the excitement in blaming men, the journalist failed to grasp that robots will clean the bathrooms, indeed the whole flat/house, and AI will take increasinly better jobs.
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>>107729499
>Is there any way to mass-delete private messages on Fagbook?
program some quick shit in javascript anon. it's not that difficult.

>Is there a way to delete messages without FB sending a notification to the other person?
>Is there a way to delete dms if you are blocked?
idk, I didn't even know you got notified when others deleted messages.
>>
good locations or communities online where people post things they might want help with reverse engineering, software, games etc?
>>
=== /Sec/ News:
>The Thought Emporium Explores IMSI Cell Phone Tracking and Other Advanced Cell Phone Attacks with Software Defined Radios
https://www.rtl-sdr.com/the-thought-emporium-explores-imsi-cell-phone-tracking-and-other-advanced-cell-phone-attacks-with-software-defined-radios/
>Over on YouTube, The Thought Emporium channel has uploaded a video outlining how mobile phones constantly leak unique IMSI identifiers over the air, making passive location tracking much easier than most people expect. While LTE and 5G improve security, older 2G and 3G protocols still expose permanent subscriber IDs that can be collected and linked to movement over time.
>The video highlights how accessible this surveillance is. A cheap RTL-SDR USB dongle, basic antenna, and free software pre-installed on DragonOS are enough to passively collect IMSI numbers from nearby phones running on 3G. Once you know a person's unique IMSI number, you can easily track their movements if you have cheap radios monitoring the areas they frequent.

The video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UtwQ9APzYWA
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>>107730933
You might use some of the discussions on these:
https://xcancel.com/LaurieWired
https://hackaday.com/
>>
>>107601582
I am planning to get a librebooted Thinkpad, but also use it as a client to mu homelad, so does this render having libreboot on the Thinkpad a bit useless? To what extend is it possible to operate a homelab considering it "compromised"
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>>107731152
>twatter
>discussions
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>>107730933
https://sizeof.cat/cafe/
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>>107731181
What do you intend to use the homelab for? I just see no use case
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>>107733062
well the homelab would be for my nas, and all kinds of services, media storage, and for any compute intensive tasks, I just wonder if it becomes a bit useless to go to the lengths of librebooting a Thinkpad when the problem I am solving is still present on other hardware I use. I suppose this is more a philosophical question
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>>107733411
Sounds like spending a lot of time for little gain unless you really want to make a homelab.
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>>107717435
Anon, this is glowtown.
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>>107735054
Are the glowies in the room with us right now?
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Thanks for keeping the thread alive, anon. Been checking some certifications
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>>107736912

They don't need to.
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>>107736912

says the glowie
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>>107736912
Mostly during lunch break time.
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>>107736918
Certifications? Pfft
And who exactly certifies you are a good hacker? They only certify you're a good boy but that's about it. They don't measure actual skill
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>>107739586
I certified your moms pussy.
>>
>>107740309
certified rank
>>
Been checking some C++, its such an elegant and well developed language. I'm surprised more people don't use it
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>>107742173
You could combine your interst in C++ with /sec/ by auditing SerenityOS.
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>>107742173
sarcasm doesn't convey well over the internet
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>>107743227
Why? Its genuinely an amazing language
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OK, time for a lunarpunk bump. Also need more music soon.
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>>107746271
Lunarpunk is amazing. Almost like steampunk
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>>107731124
I'm getting real sick and tired of technology senpai.
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>>107747175
you could have fun and run your own BTS, but instead you are here lamenting the tech. why?
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>>107679087
>>107748938
how the fuck is this literal fucking spam not removed?
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>>107749725
Because it's useful.
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>>107695423
>>107696738
You can still get Japanese tech, like Sony phones. I don't know where they're made though. Could be China, or India, or Vietnam, or something like that.

>You could fix pretty much everything from there trivially compared to shit from the USA and Europe.
Maybe that will change in the coming years. The EU is requiring that smartphones sold in its market, from 2027 if I remember right, must have an easily replaceable battery. I think that's a good step.
>>
boooooo
>>
>>107749845
I ran a repair shop in the hay days of blackberry. Shit was much more easy to repair. You can find battery, bodies, displays and stuff of the most popular devices, but it still doesn't change that anything in the SOC pretty much demands a full replacement. Even accessing the debug interfaces is getting much harder.

Also Sony is pretty much dead now, after they sold Vaio, their hardware has been going much less accessible. I don't even know the last time I saw a Sony phone selling in the EU. Which is a shame because they are probably the best manufacturers for custom ROMS, even if they are overpriced.
>>
>>107746872
>Lunarpunk is amazing. Almost like steampunk
Yes, but also a lot more comfy.

>>107747175
>I'm getting real sick and tired of technology senpai.
Someone thought Neuromancer was a blueprint rather than a warning, so here we are with dystopi but without the cooler parts of the tech. So I work in tech but make sure I live in a more bucolic countryside and turned my garden into something closer to a solarpunk orchard.
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>>107750490
They're kinda trying to build something like that in the center of Madrid. I doubt they'll succeed though, since every major project in this godforsaken country is doomed to fail. You'd have high-pop green towers in the center, and you can just live a bit outside of that surrounded by greenery and hills (like up in the north of Madrid, near Guadarrama and all that).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=La5WajtNcWw
https://www.elespanol.com/madrid/20251125/madrid-nuevo-norte-comienza-hacerse-real-marca-inicio-obras/1003744017595_0.html
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>>107750250
>I don't even know the last time I saw a Sony phone selling in the EU
Looks like you can get them on German Amazon:

https://www.amazon.de/-/en/Sony-Xperia-10-VII-Charcoal/dp/B0FPDFGFLZ
>>
>>107750539
I thought Spain had a major problem with water supplies.
>>
>>107750555
Yeah, I meant in physical stores. I go around the Mediterranean a lot and haven't seen one in the wild in a long long time. Not even in Germany's physical stores when I happen to be around.
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>new cyberpunk glasses
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>>107752517
Finally.

I hope a clear transition to democracy, so all the venezuelans scattered in the region come back and reconstruct the country, just like Germany and Japan at the end of World War Two.

Of course the USA provisional government is going to take everything they want but to the victor belong the spoils.

I just hope the final transition does not take too much time.
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>>107752517
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>>107752804
Here in Europe, the TDS is in full flow. Dry comments regarding our grand leaders on a comments field will be instantly wiped but TDS is essentially encouraged.
The glorious leaders are building new and deep bunkers but the people will have to fend for themselves. Our intellectual elite is fine with this. What could possibly go wrong?
>>
>>107752517
I like it as a matter of fact, they look comfy. Just add some Occulus Rift tech and its all good.
>>107752804
What type of democracy? And I agree, I hope ALL venezuelans living in USA are sent back to rebuild their country. They love it after all and now that USA has fixed it for them, they have no reason to remain in USA.
>>
>>107753018
>what type of democracy?
Representative, like they had in the past.

In a perfect world, a clean healthy transition between USA Control and Venezuela should start with the restoration and publication of the Tally Sheets from the elections of 2024, originally suppressed by the regime, in order to legitimize the elected president, Edmundo González.
>>
>>107753321
>Representative
Does any other country have as direct democracy as Switzerland? If so, why are the Swiss the only to make it work?
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>>107753383

The swiss work because they have a highly evolved political system, and a small country allows easy governance.
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>>107601582
Thieves run the spy state. Watch out for yourself.
>>
>>107752517
>>107752904
tagged and bagged
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>>107753446
>The swiss work because they have a highly evolved political system,
Democracy is 2500 years old, should have been evolved everywhere by now.
>and a small country allows easy governance.
Ireland, Iceland, Scandinavia, the Baltic states are all about the same size yet without as direct a democracy as that of Switzerland. My hunch is that it somehow relates to the Iron Law of the Oligarchy but I cannot see how the Swiss, of all people, could evade this. When Europe inevitably falls, perhaps Switzerland remains the only island of freedom.
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>>107754209
>Democracy is 2500 years old, should have been evolved everywhere by now.
Democracy is a lie, only the elites get to choose who is chosen. That's what makes it so cyberpunk and so cool.
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>>107746271
Once again, we need a Lunarpunk bump, and this time with a nightcore: https://youtu.be/0XD84IuIK6w
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>>107755431
Sounds like some sort of spacepunk mariachi.
kek
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>>107755431
Thank you anon, I appreciate it! This is the best thread in the entire site. Cyberpunk culture is more alive than ever
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If I want to learn to hack, is it better to learn C or C++ first? I'm still quite new to this
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>>107757324

Do bug hunting.

The most basic bug hunting is searching for CVEs in web applications that belong to organizations subscribed to public freelance audit programs. Hacker One. Bug Crowd. INTIGRITI.

The best target are Big Boomers. Companies one hundred or more years old. They have BIG, OLD infrastructure. They are like big old bisons eating in the valley.

Here is a challenge, create a proof of concept for one exercise from portswigger portfolio and connect the proof of concept to burp suite using the technology from you preferred programming language that performs the proxy http connection capabilities for your Domain Logic Application.

Do it by hand, only using the LLM as a Cognitive Support Agent that helps you to read and understand each line from the library you are about to consume. Request the LLM to explain to you the signature of each relevant function, identifying the parameters, the possible arguments and their return value in order FOR YOU to understand what the library does and how you can communicate with it and what gives you back.

For example, originally the proof of concept is going to work through the HTTP protocol. ¿Do you understand the library good enough to integrate your proof of concept with Portswigger technology using HTTPS instead?

¿Do you know how to create your own certificate to validate your proof of concept so the client can execute it himself/herself?
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>>107757324
this here >>107757497 is good advice, but here is my alternate take. C is great for hacking, but you have to know a TON of C to be able to do anything (I'm assuming you're new to programming overall, correct me if I'm wrong). Python is super useful in the hacking world, and with just a little bit of it you can already do a lot. Python will get you up and running much faster.
Sure, you won't be writing any malware in Python, that's something C does. But say you get access to someone's machine. What do you do then? Well, whatever you do, it's gonna be much faster and easier to do it with Python. Build a tool to traverse every directory, search for useful data, zip it and curl it out of there. It could be 10-15 lines in Python, and weeks of work in C.

Another approach is to go here https://nostarch.com/catalog/security and look for any book that piques your interest. Just dive in, see what you like. Of course you won't understand much, but then you start backtracking until you're on solid ground.
>>
>>107758569
>>107757497
Doesnt the AI shit already on the brink of "solving" most common approaches of Bug Bounty?
Look at Shannon AI for example.

Man... looks like every field has a dark future...
We are fucked, it's over...
>>
Do employers besides government care about the Sec+? I've spent a few weeks going through the training material - its all theory and no practical application. Can't say I learned much, but I've been in IT for a while.
>>
>>107752927
The intellectuals here are bending backwards to defend Maduro, claiming that even though he was not legally elected president, he is nevertheless legally the head of state. Impressive reasoning. And because of this, they argue, the arrest was illegal. The intellectual elite is now totally disconnected from reality.

>>107754241
>Democracy is a lie,
Sadly, this is too close to the truth, and is why the intellectuals shamelessly follow Russia and Iran in complaining about Trump doing the Vuvuzela. And will Iran be next? A 50 year anniversary is coming up.
>Knock-knock
>W-who's there
>Donald!
>D-Disney time, right?
>Trump!
>Aieeeeee

>only the elites get to choose who is chosen.
It could explainm in a really twisted way, why the Swiss have a direct democracy: they are all the very elite.
>That's what makes it so cyberpunk and so cool.
It is, yes. And knowledge is power, which is more true than ever before. I get to see this up close as part of my work and it is really depressing. It is also scary to see the massive incompetence, pettyness and stupidity among the elite. The rot goes to the core and the corruption goes to the top, it is only a question of time before the whole thing collapses.
>>
new >>107759848



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