[a / b / c / d / e / f / g / gif / h / hr / k / m / o / p / r / s / t / u / v / vg / vm / vmg / vr / vrpg / vst / w / wg] [i / ic] [r9k / s4s / vip] [cm / hm / lgbt / y] [3 / aco / adv / an / bant / biz / cgl / ck / co / diy / fa / fit / gd / hc / his / int / jp / lit / mlp / mu / n / news / out / po / pol / pw / qst / sci / soc / sp / tg / toy / trv / tv / vp / vt / wsg / wsr / x / xs] [Settings] [Search] [Mobile] [Home]
Board
Settings Mobile Home
/pol/ - Politically Incorrect


Thread archived.
You cannot reply anymore.


[Advertise on 4chan]


File: Linux_mascot_tux.png (115 KB, 1057x1280)
115 KB PNG
>>
>>534454782
Something you can run off usb and load completely into ram.
>>
>>534454782
the one that can run on open source hardware
>>
>>534454782
Arch is a good choice
>>
>>534454782
Enemy of the state/Diagnosed with schizophrenia
>Tails
>Whonix
133t h4x_0r
>ParrotOS Security
>Kali
Normalfaggot
>Pop!_OS
>>
>>534454782
Assembly
>>
>buying drugs on dnm
Tails
>general linux
Arch
>>
>>534455203
What's special about pop
>>
File: 1496972584456.jpg (617 KB, 1920x1200)
617 KB JPG
>>534454782
HELLOO THIS IS LINUS TORVALDS AND I PRONOUNCE LINUX AS LEENOOX
>>
>>534454782
Avoid systemd
>>
>>534454782
Pen and paper, the backdoors are in your hardware and this is a mining thread.
>>
The ones potentially capable of that are so infrequently used that downloading them for installation will likely result in you being flagged.
>>
>>534454782
Most CPUs are pozzed at the hardware level. RISC-V might be ok and then you'd have to load a none Systemd distro like Artix or maybe Arch.

>>534455062
See anon gets it. glowniggers just built backdoors into most of the chips at a hardware level, the routers, basically everything.
>>
>>534454782
Any of them if you don't access the internet.

But you wouldn't leave us, would you?
>>
>>534455436
>>534455442
Name one time when a glownigger has ever used a hardware CPU backdoor to do literally eanything
>>
>>534455740
you can't possibly be this retarded
>>
>>534454782
openbsd is supposed to be serious about security but i have not even tried it
>>
>>534455811
You're just scaring people into decision paralysis over something that's literally never going to affect them.
>Hurr durr might as well keep using Windows 11 because glowies will just use CPU backdoors to break through all of your encryption even though there isn't a single documented case of them actually doing this
>>
buy an old Pentium and dump openbsd on it. yes I'm serious. it's the only way to avoid binary blobs that are backdoors for the government and whoever else
>>
>>534455442
>Most CPUs are pozzed at the hardware level. RISC-V might be ok
intel has already compromised RISC-V with a hardware "management" platform
>>
>>534454782
systemd is going to implement age verification so none
>>
>>534455869
well if there's any ambiguity, yeah they should use linux
i'm just saying that spooks will get onto your machine, remotely, if they want to
>>
File: 1767255895674158.png (769 KB, 960x960)
769 KB PNG
>>534455740
There was this one time where they got into this British guy's computer and snooped around only to find him ordering kebab, jacking off to tranny porn and putting bets on niggerball.
They figured out quickly that it was a waste of resources and valuable time
>>
>>534455906
there might be something to this, if you can
1) reliably judge when spooks realized they should back-door all hardware
2) do anything useful on hardware prior to that time
i'm not sure pentium is that point in time though
>>
>>534455869
if AMD and intel weren't required to keep these backdoors in place, they'd have given users an option to turn it off
use your brain, nigger
>>
>>534455869
The snowden leaks outlined their strat pretty well.
>>
>>534454782
Slackware. Learn how to use it by installing it on a virtual machine first. Virtualbox is a good starting point. Debian is about the same age but (((easier to use))). Both are preddy good tho.

http://www.nic.funet.fi/pub/Linux/INSTALL/slackware/

http://www.slackbook.org/html/book.html

Sorry I would be much better help if I wasn't feeling like utter shit rn.
>>
None, but CachyOS is super high performance for emulation
>>
File: GlowniggerSCUM.png (300 KB, 612x1958)
300 KB PNG
>>534455740
kys glownigger(picrel)
>>534455908
Can you not load your own firmware/instructions? I've just started investigating open source hardware. I'll program some shit in assembly If I have to.
>>
>>534455332
He destroyed a thousand snobs with that statement but they don’t realize it. His name is pronounced Lienus so the OS is “Lie nux” NOT Lin nux. Thats how he would say it if he were American. And its Demon not Daymon stick to windoze chumps
>>
If you think the chip back doors are cool you should also know they don't even need an internet connection to see your shit just stay alive electrical connection as they have equipment that can transfer packets through power lines
>>
>>534455442
Devuan is the easy and plug and play systemd free distro.
But ultimately, Gentoo is what you want to remove all the pozz.
>>
File: OpenPowerPC.png (214 KB, 1178x1213)
214 KB PNG
>>534456463
I live 100% off grid and I always lecture anons how easy it is to set up the solar panels and never pay the electric jew again. This is even more reason to do so. A laptop uses between 15-at most 80 watts for the high end gaming laptops. RISC-V single board computers are super low power. You could set up literally a solar panel or two just for a secure computer set up. But the real issue is finding trust worthy hardware that hasn't been backdoored by jews. Realistically might be impossible. I know an old Boomer who claims he retired from some three letter agency and collects ancient PCs because it's all he trusts.

There is also OpenPOWER architecture but it's very expensive and it seems tied to Intel as well. But am I wrong to assume the ISA open source chips can be reprogrammed completely by the user and bypass any possible glownigger backdoor? The workstation in my picture costs like 6 grand so not really practical but RISC-V boards are in the hundreds not thousands, very affordable.

>>534456525
The systemd and age verification thing is a big issue in linux so not sure Gentoo's stance but a few distros have openly promised to defy the laws. So I won't use anything otherwise.
>>
>>534455203
>kali
SAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAR
>>
>>534454782
>not rolling your own kernel
ngmi
>>
File: 1000154535.jpg (18 KB, 439x455)
18 KB JPG
NixOS because it's easier to keep tidy
>>
>>534456953
you paid 6k for that piece of junk?
>>
>>534456953
the problem with raptor is that you're still trusting their company and everyone in the production and delivery chain
who the fuck knows what's really on that silicon
>>
>>534456953
>Gentoo's stance
I bet there's going to be a CFLAG that you can turn on/off for openRC or systemd if you're retarded enough to still run it on Gentoo.
And whatever retarded shit upstream decides to put in the kernel can be easily patched away or the config turned off since you (can) build/configure your kernel yourself.
It's not a distribution per se, it's more like a toolkit to build your own distro, so that whole age restriction debate doesn't even apply.
>>
>>534455120
I use Arch, btw
>>
Ageless Linux
Put the code in there
>>
>>534456953
I suppose you could implement a formally verified RISC architecture in FPGA, that would give some solid guarantees. I can't fathom the difficulty to backdoor an FPGA in a way that would compromise an *implementation* of a CPU on it. But then you'd end up with a potato PC at the price of a modern gaming laptop, not even talking about the effort required.
>>
I at least have mint
>>
File: ArtixLogo.svg.png (9 KB, 250x88)
9 KB PNG
>>534457222
no
>>534457300
Again it's open source, can you not just read the code, or erase the code on the chips and load your own from a schizo hacker or I could in theory write my own CPU instructions from scratch. I'm not looking to spend 6K on a raptor. I would start as basic as possible and build the hardware system from various trusted parts. I don't need it to do much. the The whole point of open source hardware is you absolutely don't have to trust the vendor as it's open source. Or am I missing something? Honestly asking. I can't afford $10 million to make my own silicone chips from scratch and I'm sure some jew would just sneak in and fuck with it when it was being made.

>>534457315
I read some of the initial chatter by Gentoo people and it didn't look good. Vs other distros who openly say they will never comply. I'm sure the time will come where I will basically have to build a kernel from scratch or some nonsense. All apps and basically anything has to comply with the law, in theory even smart fridges. I fear Gentoo won't be immune and all linux distros will either need to openly defy this Digital ID push or bend the knee. Many are bending the knee.
>>534457404
See Ageless Linux is an answer to age verification and the Digital ID push. I don't trust anyone or any group who isn't taking this seriously and taking steps now to counteract it.
>>
>>534455657
This. If you want total protection you have to have 2 computers, one without internet and one with it. Then do your shit on the offline computer and transfer data between them through a usb drive or external hdd/ssd.
>>
>>534454782
Tails. Keep it on a bootable encrypted flash drive that can only be unlocked via physical pin buttons on the device.
>>
Damn small linux
>>
>>534454782
none of them. Do you honestly believe that they aren't all bugdoored to hell? They're just now discovering bugs that lead to priviledge escalation ten years after a performance patch was applied.
>>
>>534458051
all usb drives are infected
>>
>>534457993
>Ageless Linux
While I sympathise with their motives I find that projects that define themselves "against" whatever are rarely an answer.
Scouring through the Gentoo forums I see people mostly seeing it the same way I do: Gentoo is a build system, this garbage is not applicable to it. At worst, a CFLAG or license keyword to explicitly unmask.
>>
>>534457558
I'll look into that, not sure what it all means. Unfortunately memory attacks are also a thing even though I'm not sure if those are backdoors or just an organic exploit. But i'm trying to chase down a non-pozzed CPU first and I'll work backwards from there to try for a secure workstation. As for the cost vs performance that's not the issue. The issue is security. Either it's secure or it's not, and if it's not secure you might as well load Windows 11 CIA spyware and say fuck it. I want a secure computer and it takes what it takes....or perhaps it's impossible and this is all a fool's errand. But time will tell.

>>534458209
This as well, huge Linux exploit just dropped and it was around for ages. I've also been debating making a bespoke OS as best I can but the complexity of the project is growing exponentially at this point. Perhaps BSD or some custom modified version of BSD?

As of early May 2026, the newest and most significant Linux exploit is "Copy Fail" (CVE-2026-31431), a high-severity local privilege escalation vulnerability. It allows an unprivileged user to gain root access on a target system, according to The Hacker News.Here are the critical details regarding this vulnerability:How Long It Has Been AroundThe vulnerability has existed for nearly a decade, specifically introduced in August 2017 through a source code commit aimed at optimizing the Linux kernel's cryptographic subsystem. This means systems running for the last nine years are potentially affected.
>>
>>534454782
If something protected you from the government, then you wouldn't be allowed to have it. Simple as.
>>
>>534458336
Well it's worth a shot for people like me who want to try something
I plan on trying it on Mint as soon as I can
>>
>>534455740
>Name one time when a glownigger has ever used a hardware CPU backdoor to do literally eanything
You do realize they made the CPU hardware backdoors explicitly for this reason, right? You do remember the Vault 7 and Vault 8 Wikileaks, right?
>>
>>534454782
Red Star OS
>>
File: 1777480344105284.png (256 KB, 1228x1150)
256 KB PNG
>>534458209
oh noooooo if only there were any open source operating systems
>>
File: homeworkTIME.jpg (39 KB, 600x600)
39 KB JPG
>>534458336
Well I asked AI about your FPGA suggestion and YES, that's exactly what I need! Thanks for the tip based aussie anon. I can easily switch OS's from artix to Gentoo to BSD or whatever but I need to figure out the hardware issue first. I won't go into it but it's always important to have a fake profile for the AI to see. I can always have a regular laptop with backdoors I just watch movies on or say program games or make pixel art then use my secure workstation for shit posting about jews and other low tech stuff that needs peak security. AI says this about the FPGA workstation:

The "Workstation" Reality CheckAn FPGA-based computer will be slow.A modern Mac or PC runs at ~3,000 MHz.An FPGA-based RISC-V computer will likely run at 50 MHz to 100 MHz.The Use Case: This won't be for watching 4K video. It will be for encrypted messaging, document signing, and secure key management. It’s a "Safe Room" computer, not a gaming rig.

Thanks for your help, I have much to research.
>>
>>534454782
good question. Even Arch is pozzed, but I guess anything without systemd and with open hardware like some anon said. Maybe using something like Tails but those distros are not for everyday use, they are for specific tasks. If you are austistic enough, try a customized gentoo install or openBSD if you are paranoid too.

Forget about NixOS, it's not only pozzed but trooned.
>>
>>534454782
TempleOS. Challenge me. You cant.
>>
>>534455740
The Chinese Salt Typhoon American telecom attack reported in 2024. They used backdoors that U.S. authorities demanded be there in the first place for the purposes of spying on Americans. So it's even worse than what you asked for.
>>
>>534454782
Nothing can protect you from the government if they target you. The trick to dealing with government is to make those actions overwhelmingly expensive for them.
>>
>>534459563
Omarchy is fine for now. It does have systemd but without the age shit.
>>
>>534456011
Use something that has coreboot. It doesn't initialize the Intel ME etc.
>>
>>534455436
This
Nothing beats a rotring pen and some Japanese grid paper
>>
>>534459614
Temple os isn't Linux based.
It has less Unix lineage than windows.
>>
>>534455302
Nothing. Use mint instead.
>>
>>534456312
Just get arm.
https://pine64.com/product-category/pinebook-pro/
>>
File: penguin.jpg (143 KB, 1200x1351)
143 KB JPG
>>534454782

If your ultimate goal is privacy then yes. Especially if you got a lot of penguin content on your computer.
>>
>>534455442
Sneed
>>
why would you need protection from the government?
>>
File: 1761433511240648.png (115 KB, 379x304)
115 KB PNG
make your own with Buildroot
https://buildroot.org/
>>
>>534454782
None, linux fags already have bend the knee to age verification.
>>
Virtual machine.
>>
Distro is not as important as what you have installed on it. The more barebones your system is, the less exposed you are. Less packages = less data sent.
>>
>>534455849
the beloved is not linux and it is serious
>>
if an os doesn't let users shut down telecomms via literal antenna voltage differences from expected programs running at any one time or whenever bytes transmitted would not have added up to live traffic counts that os and that hardware are backdoored. anythig short of counting network usage from oss and programs to have been compared with live electromagnetic output incurs a backdoor had been put in place
>>
>>534454782
Nothing. It only protects you from endpoint dragnet surveillance that's baked into windows.

Look up Intel MINIX. Also amd psp. All CPUs are backdoored at the hardware level with a 2nd OS on chip. That's why Intel makes network adapters. Communication with the CPU when the PC is off :)
>>
if you can't write a program that counts hardware traffic to have been compared to expected os traffic no os or hardware or crypto would have prevented surveillance. literally ask chatgpt for the simples program to have run on windows that could compare network outputs from antennas on wifi chips to those of os requests and see how it'd go
>>
Correct me if im wrong but are there not several distros that boot entirely to ram? I believe several vpn corporations do this. Because it is more or less impossible to log or seize anything from such devices? I know a bit about this stuff but not enough to speak confidently. I downloaded linux mint just to test the waters and if youre on windows and thinking about it, i mean nows the time with how horrible windows 11 is looking
>>534461915
Is it worth it to do that? I imagine it would take alot of cpu power?
>>
>>534454782
I use Debian personally because there's so much documentation for it. I haven't heard much bad about it.
>>
>>534454782
Here’s a hot take niggers: implement your own processor on an FPGA so you don’t have to be worried about backdoors



[Advertise on 4chan]

Delete Post: [File Only] Style:
[Disable Mobile View / Use Desktop Site]

[Enable Mobile View / Use Mobile Site]

All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective parties. Images uploaded are the responsibility of the Poster. Comments are owned by the Poster.