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/cyb/er/sec/urity and cyberpunk

This is a blue board which means that it's for everybody (Safe For Work content only). If you see any adult content, please report it.

Thread replies: 318
Thread images: 29

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/Cyb/er/sec/urity general is for the discussion of anything and everything related to cyberpunk and cybersecurity.

What is cyberpunk?
>https://pastebin.com/jS37Vu7A

Nothing to hide? - The importance of a cyberpunk mindset applied to a cybersecurity skillset.
>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pcSlowAhvUk

Resources:
Cyberpunk:
Cyberpunk directory:
>https://pastebin.com/9JaJFqB2
Cyberpunk resources:
>https://pastebin.com/7DWCsAc8

Cybersecurity:
Cybersecurity essentials:
>https://pastebin.com/JWx5xeEM
Cybersecurity resources:
>https://pastebin.com/NaUPUDF0

Harden your OS, reroute your DNS and fire up the VPN!
Shit just got real: - Looking for more resources, help is welcomed.
>https://pastebin.com/JXyM4fTe

The Old Skool: - Looking for more resources, help is welcomed.
>0ld 5k00l h4ck3rz: http://67.225.133.110/~gbpprorg/#40

IRC:
Join: irc://irc.rizon.net:6697
>#/g/punk - Requires SSL
>#/g/sec - Requires SSL
IRC guide:
>https://pastebin.com/bh3Uyq3a

Thread archive:
>https://archive.rebeccablacktech.com/g/search/subject/cyb/
>https://archive.rebeccablacktech.com/g/search/subject/sec/
>https://archive.rebeccablacktech.com/g/search/text/%2Fcyb%2F%20%2Fsec%2F/

Thread backup:
>https://www.cyberpunked.org/

Previous thread:
>>61789074
>>
>>61842392
lainchan is shway as fuarrk
>>
What made you choose to pursue a career in security?
>>
>>61842392
where the fuck is og OP edition
>>
>>61842644
I just reposted the one from the last thread.
Post the old one in here and we can use it next time.
>>
>>61842791
I'm just memeing dude
>>
>>61842644
Hey bruss I'm here

I was just at work doing my weekly log in of all 6 of my separate defence logins.

Then I had a nice brew with my dad in his office and built a megablocks Huey helicopter.

Now I'm doing a large turd.

I love Fridays.

Sorry for not bumping the old thread, I don't use my phone at work much.
>>
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>>61839282
Do you have any links to this type of file embedding? It looks fascinating, especially things like pic related
>>
>>61843166
Well I mean, all of the techniques mentioned above are essentially steganography. There's an entire field dedicated to performing this type of stuff.

Check out this intro to stego if you're curious: https://pequalsnp-team.github.io/cheatsheet/steganography-101
>>
>>61843243
Sounds good man, thanks for the link
>>
What we learning this weekend?

I'm going to make a new lab, seperate to my pen testing lab; a full data centre type environment.

I have no idea how to set one up in real life, so I feel this will be a good exercise for me
>>
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Im on a 8 hours car drive.
Should i read this book or shitpost on 4chan ?
>>
>>61843166
so for this you would just do however many left shifts and it's reveal the kot? got a link to the original image? i want to try my hand
>>
>>61844873
How the fuck can you read while driving and not feel sick

It makes me so nauseous
>>
https://youtu.be/tgLjhT7S15U

We are so fucked
>>
>>61844985
I cant
>>
>>61844123
Im just going through exploit-exercises. No CTFs this weekend means I just get to do main sequence.
>>
>>61844985
different anon, but I've been reading in the car my whole life. As long as I can see the window from my peripherals I'm fine. Once that's gone I start to get ill but still never anything unbearable.
>>
>umpc
>nexus 5 with nethunter
Which would you pick?
>>
How safe is macOS as far as cyber security goes?
>>
>>61845371
Can you please try this train wreck of a sentence again and elaborate upon what you actually want to know
>>
>>61845187
nexus
>>
I can never seem to find any cyberpunk themes for my phone, been looking for a while and nothing allows your own wallpaper
>>
>>61845487
Try /wg/
>>
Fuck why we so slow
>>
>>61845463

Sorry. I guess I want to know how vulnerable macOS is? I've followed most of the stuff in the OP about securing my web browser and I've been working on reducing my internet identity footprint, but I'm concerned as to how exploitable the OS is. I do a lot of work while connected to public WiFi, and while I do what I can to keep myself safe in that regard I'm still paranoid.
>>
>>61846714
contrary to popular belief, most on /g/ don't give a shit about cyberpunk stuff, or know anything about netsec
>>
>>61846773
There are some very scary exploits out for OS X, that embed themselves into mainboard firmware

There are no where near the number as there is on Windows; two fold because the unix-like base makes it more secure than Windows and API hooks.

As it's been gaining serious popularity over the last ten years however, the market for OS X malware has ramped the fuck up.

It's secure enough skids aren't going to touch you. The scary government people however, are not stopped by OS X.
>>
http://www.gearbest.com/headsets/pp_288915.html

from /csg/, but /cyb/ as fuck
>>
>>61849045
Looks pretty nice but I don't know if I would risk 60 bucks for trying it.
>>
>>61849045
What the actual fuck
>>
>>61849045
anyone has used bone conduction headphones? are they any good?

i guess it makes breathing somewhat harder and i doubt it's comfortable for a longer period of time

but yeah, looks cool
>>
>>61849142
it's headphones that you put on your mouth, what is it that you don't understand
>>
Is AES truly secure?
Is the weak link the Key and Key exchange?

Is Diffie-Hellman
>>
>>61849164
Why would I want that is what I don't understand
>>
>>61849204
>Key exchange
Pass the hash is a major weakness that's exploited often
>>
CTFs are for faggots
go crack some real stuff that actually tries to be secure instead of toy challenges designed to be solved under a day
>>
>>61849317
Here's your (You).
>>
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>>61842998
>Now I'm doing a large turd.
Cyberdump?

>I love Fridays.
Yup!

>Sorry for not bumping the old thread, I don't use my phone at work much.
The strawpoll suggests a heavy European interest. I had expected more from the US and some from Asia.
http://www.strawpoll.me/13665376/r

We had 38 responses but last thread had about twice the posters.

Also: reminder of the Cyberpunk FTP archive:
ftp://collectivecomputers.org:21212/Cyberpunk/
password: guest
>>
>>61842563
Being broke, having a lot of NEET time on my hands, and thinking that having a general background in computers would give me a head start or act as a "stepping stone".

I'm studying Infosec, digital forensics & datasciemnce. Infosec is by far the most difficult and requires a wide breadth of knowledge.
>>
This might be slightly off topic but does anyone know exactly how Theresa May intends to ban encryption? Is she going to ban RSA? AES? I've heard nothing on how they intend to implement this. They say they want some "master key" system, but I don't think they have any idea on how to implement that. It goes without saying that whatever they do will be a disaster and a complete failure, but I'd at least like to know what to expect.
>>
>>61849775
I don't know about the UK, but here in Aus the gov wants to pass legislation that will compel the us based companies to decrypt the messages the spooks ask for.

Let's read that again.

Australia will pass legislation that will compel US based companies to do things.

I don't know how the fuck turnball expects this to go, but I can see the companies just flat out ignoring it. Who the fuck does he think he is, making laws for other nations he isn't involved in?

Oh that's right, the laws of Australia come above the laws of mathematics. That is a direct quote from our prime minister.
>>
>>61849809
They can already do that here. They want to ban end to end encryption. They want even PGP to be illegal unless it's backdoored. They're fucking idiots who don't know how encryption works. If I manually formed a PGP message with nothing but pen and paper, would they send me to jail? I have no idea how they intend for this system to work.
>>
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>>61849775
what makes you think May understands computers? Gary Mckinnon "hacked" nasa by searching empty passworded users and she sided with america to deport him because oh hes a bad man breaking those puters, no need to try the dude looking for UFOs in his own country, lets send him to one with a death penalty and shit...

the most she knows is what she hears from others at COBRA, which is a fucking supervillian corp name in the fuckin batman universe.

>>61842428
ayy lainon
>>
>>61850098
>They can already do that here
No they can't, otherwise banning it wouldn't be necessary.
>>
>>61844985
The secret is to sit in the back.
>>
>>61849045
>Discontinued
You fucker.

Anybody know what the best throat microphone/bone-conduction headphone combination is?
>>
>>61849757
I've never thought of anything being challenging. Just a lot of work that needs to get done and a lot of learning and practicing.
Just know that you'll eventually reach your goal.
>>
>>61842392
ok so im running arch linux, my phone is rooted and flashed with a custom rom, i drive a hybrid car, i work in IT... now how do i start looking like i am from the future? khakis and a polo arent cutting it anymore
>>
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>>61850821
Maybe try something like this.
>>
>>61850898
too old timey. i was thinking more jensen from deus ex but toned down a little
>>
>>61850428
They can intercept client-to-server communications, but not client-to-client without effort.
>>
>>61850821
>>>/fa/
>>
>>61850821
You don't need to actively look like you're from the future. The more you do to bring yourself into the future, the more that the future expresses itself through you.

Also, consider getting /fit/ and becoming a /fa/ggot.
>>
>>61850258
>hacked nsa
>by searching empty passworded users
Lel wtf. Human retards making it easy. Buts its dudes own fault for getting caught.

>COBRA is batman
Actually its GI Joe you gen Zer.
>>
How to make an android smartphone more secure / private aside the following :
-managing permissions
-managing network connections
-encrypting phone
-using vpn
-not using google services
>>
Why is IDA memed so much in the professional field? I understand it's the best at static analysis because of the hexrays decompiler but what advantage does it have over olly/x64dbg when dealing with packed and obfuscated stuff? Are you telling me most of the professional reversing is performed on unprotected software and people just analyze what the decompiler shits out instead of reading assembly?
>>
>>61851160
I've just begun reversing stuff and I think people hold IDA in such high regard because it's good at making guesses about code and data constructs. It also supports a lot of different file formats/processors.
>>
What do are your thoughts on Marcus Hutchkins (the guy who stopped WannaCry) getting arrested for "possibly writing malware-like code?

Excuse the Guardian link but none of my regular news sites has anything on it.
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2017/aug/11/marcus-hutchins-arrested-wannacry-kronos-cybersecurity-experts-react
>>
>>61851357
What are your*
Never post while on painkillers. They do bad things to your grammar
>>
>>61846714
>>61847547
There are only 4 people in this thread who know anything at all about security and they don't post here often.
>>61849204
AES has been proven to be secure on a logic level, but it has a lot of issues with side channel analysis on consumer hardware.
>>61849317
CTFs are harder than the real thing. Here is your (you)
>>61851160
You are mixing a debugger with a disassembler. Ida supports everything and is dirt cheap if you are looking at it from a business perspective. Nothing even comes close. Radare2 only recently became good enough to use, but it's hard to collaborate on and binary ninja is still to alpha but will end up being the thing students use.
>>61851357
No idea need to wait for more information but leaning towards he did nothing wrong.
>>
>>61851160
Most valuable things to me are how ida makes almost every internal function available in some way through its api (idapython) and it taking a lot of menial work out of the picture through its (fairly) competent and comprehensive analysis system.

Honorary mentions for allowing me to edit the colour of literally everything and the built in python interpreter.

As for decompiler vs disassembly, it depends on the person. Working with the decompiler requires knowing a lot about typing and you spend most of your time fixing the mess ida made. Working with the disassembler requires a lot more control flow and variable tracing, and perhaps a bit more experience to be good at.
>>
Is there a good reason to move away from systemd? I've heard rumors of it being insecure but I fail to understand why that is
>>
>>61851573
Arguably you could say that radare2 is easier to automate but it's lack of a user interface will hold it back from mainstream adoption.
>>
>>61851737
It has a web-based UI that you can spawn from the command line but it's quite terrible.
I wish x64dbg was available for Linux but at the same time I understand why it's not after having written a low level resource monitor for Linux. WinAPI may be garbage but it allows you to do so much with the system compared to the crippled procfs that you have to use for most stuff.
>>
>>61851737
r2 has a webgui now but it's kind of a pain in the ass to get setup and use...
>>
>>61851737
How about: https://github.com/hteso/iaito
>>
>>61851154
>android smartphone
>-managing permissions
doesn't work for processes and apps running as root. watch those
>-managing network connections
again, things running as root can circumvent these
>-encrypting phone
there's been several articles that the hardware crypto is broken because manufacturers fucked up. I don't have that article at hand, will report back
>-using vpn
making you easier to track imho.
be aware that VPN providers are well known and if you use your own, ... well.
>-not using google services
good start but you'll need to use some if you don't want your phone as a browser and watch
>>
>>61851154
>>61851866

one of these articles
https://www.neowin.net/news/full-disk-encryption-easily-broken-on-tens-of-millions-of-android-devices

the one I read before which I read before stated that this issue isn't limited to Qualcomm. I just don't remember which site that article was on
>>
>>61844886
You can find the original image here: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a8/Steganography_original.png
>>
So is Protonmail good? I'm looking for a mail to move to completely.
>>
>>61853963
Yeah, it's good.
>>
>>61853963
Cockli
>>
>>61844873
You should read the book. It is enormously influential and will most likely see a renaissance thanks to CRISPR/Cas9.
>>
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>>61849045
>http://www.gearbest.com/headsets/pp_288915.html
It mentions use of the cloud. That is bad /sec/.

Also it looks like Cybergoth is back with a vengeance.
>>
>>61853963
wasn't that one of these whose canatries expired?
>>
>>61847547
You know we had a straw poll about this?
>>
>>61842392
How can I store a piece of data forever? all of the storage mediums currently in use won't be usable in even 20 years. Is storing data on the Bitcoin blockchain or a similar currency a good idea?
>>
>>61855609
There are only 4 people in this thread who know anything at all about bitcoin and they're all on holiday right now.
>>
>>61851760
Tfw electron is a step up
>>
what are some good resources on satellite /sec/
>>
>>61856384
There are only 4 people in this thread who know anything at all about satellites and they're all space right now.
>>
Where's the anon who knows where the 4 people who know anything are?
>>
>>61855609
History tells us that clay tablets and vellum will last for thousands of years.

I can see a market for clay tablet printers with cuneiform print heads. This writing was also decoded, but we have no idea if written English will be understood in 2000 years time.

Long time storage is acknowledged as a hard problem.
>>
>>61851115
NASA not NSA.
>>
>>61855946
This is a good meme
>>
>>61856650
There's only 4 people who know about the 4 people and they are all having sex in the missionary position with the lights off for the purpose of procreation
>>
You guys watch N O D E?
>>
>>61854809
I thought cockli got busted by the feds?
>>
>>61855609

crystalline storage is becoming a thing and they are growing the crystals like in junior high science class. people involved estimate millions of years of storage. google 'superman crystal' for more.
>>
>>61857305
You stole the line I wanted to say.
>>
https://www.newscientist.com/article/2143499-ships-fooled-in-gps-spoofing-attack-suggest-russian-cyberweapon/
>>
>>61843166
>>61844886
You can find the description of it here, nothing complex:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steganography#Example_from_modern_practice
>>
>>61857408
You mean the YouTube channel where he makes/mods shit? If so, yeah ive got half a dozen project videos lined up to watch this morning
>>
>>61857541
how would 4chan filter this to prevent people spreading child porn then? a neural network or something?
>>
>>61857483
That is just nav war, a sub set of electronic warfare. Pseudolites are commercially available and can be repurposed for this. With today's SDR systems the tech is available to anyone willing to spend some time putting the parts together.

>>61843243
>>61853767
>>61857541
This stuff should definitely in a /sec/ pasta. OP, are you copying this?
>>
>>61857847
Literally fucking nothing
>>
>>61857847
>4chan

It wouldn't because it runs on servers serving mostly text data, not a lot of hardware there. Not to mention all kinds of other data can be obscured, not just images. Could be text, like links to torrents or playlists, archive files. The size is concern for bigger files as for a 3MB raster saving only 1 bit per single channel byte yields just 128kBs. This can be circumvented by splitting the file around several images and then using a special function concatenate obfuscated data.
>>
>>61844123

Go read up on Vmware ESXI. It's free and it's the general way most big enterprises set up their virtualized environments.
>>
>>61857895
I think he meant storing images, extracting them using reverse method and then analyzing them for kiddy porn. NNs already do the last part.
>>
>>61857885
>OP, are you copying this?
No. The pasta is being cut down for being excessive and ridiculous.
>>
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>>61857541
neat
>>
>>61858078
i'm hoping he was being facetious
>>
>>61858126
in the background you can see the process of someone realizing they need to read documentation btw
>>
Tron style maps: http://tangrams.github.io/tangram-docs/?procedural/tronish.yaml#16/40.7053/-74.0098
>>
Are any of the 4 people in this thread who know anything about automating binary analysis here and can they show me a good guide of what try and automate. Radare2 is preferable because I'm europoor
>>
>>61858126
>>61858224
nice, so you got it working, cool. ok ill give it a go
>>
>>61858670
http://www.wikihow.com/Ask-Better-Questions
>>
>>61858867
https://www.google.com/amp/s/blog.trailofbits.com/2016/06/03/2000-cuts-with-binary-ninja/amp/
This but with more complicated examples.
>>
>>61859046
I keep hearing about ninja
>>
>>61859740
It's good, but not ready for prime time. It's competition is hopper not ida.
>>
So I'm supposed to create an interactive exhibit that will get people interested in cybersecurity, but I'm having a hell of a time trying to think of things that would make your average joe interested without it being overly complex or "boring". Also nothing wireless because apparently it would be a legal nightmare if somebody accidentally connected and got their shit wrecked. The only thing I've got so far is having 3 computers and having people send an email to the other computer and having the 3rd computer capturing it or a more fun option might be to change the contents then send it on its way.
>>
>>61859764
it's for average joes? make a small capture the flag
>>
>>61849692
thanks anon, this ftp archive is really neat desu
>>
>>61859813
That's a pretty good idea actually although I'm not sure what kind of challenges I would do for non technical people. Maybe something like the early bandit levels in overthewire could work?
>>
Whats the lightest and most secure linux distro to install on a LAPTOP? I was recommended viod which I really like but im not sure how to make it more secure or hell how to install it (I can only get it to boot off usb)
>>
>>61860014
Use Alpine Linux.
>>
>>61860040
Is it based off ubuntu? I heard that systemmd was a botnet
>>
>>61860059
No, it is an independent distro. It uses OpenRC, musl libc and some other stuff.
alpinelinux.org
>>
>>61860059
Systemd being a botnet is a meme. Systemd is free software so you can audit and modify it to make sure it doesn't have back doors. People dislike it because it goes against the UNIX philosophy and it is quite complex and they don't trust Red Hat. Also, you should check the definition of botnet.
>>
>>61860071
So no systemmd stuff? How do I do the "harded" os thing listed in the op?
>>
>>61860101
I just want something that werks without me having to modify and audit it. I know the definition of botnet.

>>61860040
Is it lightweight? Ubuntu is kindy of bloated and laggy on my laptop
>>
>>61860122
Just out of curiosity have you tried a different flavor of ubuntu like ubuntu mate or lubuntu cause those are more lightweight then the bloated whore known as unity.
>>
>>61860122
Go on the website it literally says right there:
>Small. Simple. Secure.
>Alpine Linux is a security-oriented, lightweight Linux distribution based on musl libc and busybox.

If you want something that jest werks, then you are out of luck. Most of the just werks distros use systemd and security based distros are generally set things up yourself. Alpine Linux does have an install script to help you install stuff, but you have to install all the packages you want to; they have a smaller package base than most distros. If your laptop struggles with Ubuntu you should use a lighter weight distro or use an installing which doesn't come with a default DE so you can choose a much lighter weight one like OpenBox.
Maybe try Busenlabs? It's based off debian so it has systemd but it is lightweight and works well.
https://www.bunsenlabs.org/

If you really don't like systemd, the only distros that don't use it off the top of my head are:
Alpine Linux
Gentoo
Devuan
Slackware
BSDs
>>
>>61855398
HOT
>>
>>61860211
I tried lubuntu but it wouldn't load on my laptop.
>>61860226
Well if there is like instructions I can follow can do it. But if its like gentoo I dont know what the fuck im doing
>>
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>>61860348
Well, you're fucked then, because the documentation isn't very good because the distro has only a small community. Really, just install Gentoo and call it a day. Installing gentoo isn't particularly hard, just time consuming, and the gentoo community in #gentoo @ freenode are very friendly.
>>
>>61860348
Just go with Debian
systemd, but whatever the fuck since your new as shit.
If that's still too much for your laptop then install something that only includes the base, so then you wouldn't have so much bloat
>>
To that anon who recommended the edx Cybersecurity Micromasters, thank you.
Free basic learning is always a good thing.
>>
>>61860371
Where can I learn gentoo?
>>61860426
Yeah I might just end up doing that.
How do I got about auditing and modifying the systemd so no backdoors?
>>
>>61859764
Set up a bunch of vms with exploits on them and a jump box to remote into. Make a story about how someone is breaking in for some reason and you play the role of the bad guy.
>>
>>61859764
Demonstrate using the social engineering toolkit and arpspoof how you can make a copy of the Facebook login page, and trick people into using it while you scoop up their credentials
>>
>>61860122
>I know the definition of botnet.
Then please explain to me why you think systemd is one then.
>>
>>61860348
Hmm too much for your laptop hey.

There's always DamnSmallLinux, old school crunchbang, knoppix?
>>
>>61860853
Are you a fucking Mong or what
>>
>>61861642
>crunchbang
hasnt been a thing for years breh
>>
>>61861642
>knoppix
this is a live distro
>>
so ive seen a lot of books, articles and videos about people using, or at least SAYING they use the rpi as a pentest tool by putting kali on it.

The question I have is, why? Why not a proper laptop? Something with a little more than fucking zero gpu/cpu power? I dont even want to think about how awful a hashcat session on rpi must be.

Why is it being pimped out so hard as a pentest tool?
>>
>>61862800
It's to use it as a remote device. You plant it at the target system, hook it up with some sweet social engineering and then use it as a proxy to get into the network.
>>
>>61862824
Interesting. Well, that makes sense.
>>
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Has /cyb/ taken a look at this?

http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b0916ghz/secrets-of-silicon-valley-series-1-1-the-disruptors

> Jamie's journey ends in the remote island hideout of a former Facebook executive who has armed himself with a gun because he fears this new industrial revolution could lead to social breakdown and the collapse of capitalism

Pajeets mad at Uber, ex Faceberg employee goes inna woods, this is some comfy stuff lads
>>
>>61860014
A few threads back I was recommended Void Linux to replace the old Lubuntu I have. Sadly it wouldn't boot.
>>
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>>61863550
sounds nice
however
>>
>>61849809
1. The US does this with nearly every other country
2. Turnball is a retard, I wish someone would just rape him with nigger dicks. Also funny enough, while he was calling for PGP to be banned he and his cabinet were sending messages to each other on Wickr during parliament time.
>>
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>>61864157
>>
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>>61843166
>>61843166
>>
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>>61864213
>>61843166
>>
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>>61864223
>>61864213
>>61843166


spooky spooky spook spook spooka spook spooks mode
>>
>>61864098
Same here. Not britfag.
>>
>>61864236
>>61864223
>>61864213
>>61843166

>>61810624

the thread in question where other people posted actual images with content embedded in them but the mod only chose to delete and ban the 10000x10000 gif that crashed his mobile web browser


MODS BTFO AND ON SUICIDE WATCH

mods confirmed for mobile phone shitposters
>>
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>>61864236
How strange, I get a 404 when I try open it on iOS. Ty for sharing, I will make sure to troll some newfags on b
>>
>>61864268
>ios
found your problem
>>
>>61864098
Is this youtube-dl? If so, file a bug.
>>
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>>61864252
Another anon, but mods banned me too for posting a "snowcrash". Didn't matter that the raster data of the png was 1:1 to the original file. So practically no embedding.
>>
>>61864808
it's because the video's region locked.
someone with a british IP could use youtube-dl to download it and upload it somewhere else so the rest of us could check it out
>>
The ministry of finances in Poland is starting to censor the Internet. It feels like you can go to jail for anything here right now. Probably soon they'll illegalize Tor and other similar tools. This country is getting worse and worse recently. I just wanted to share this thought, how's your country treating the freedom of using a computer?
>>
>>61865002
>The ministry of finances in Poland is starting to censor the Internet

Please be more specific. That would help to keep the discussion going.
>>
>>61865094
Right now they're blocking some gambling websites, but soon they intend to extend to blocking websites that make it possible to avoid some tax regulations. I think that at the moment, they're doing it blocking the DNS.
>>
>>61865002

>Pooland

nobody cares
>>
They request the ISP to block certain DNS.
>>
>>61865002
>I just wanted to share this thought, how's your country treating the freedom of using a computer?
Well Spaniard here. I always wanted to run a Tor node but some friends that know more than me suggested that our gov is very sensible about that kind of things right now (and for a while) which makes me frustrated.

>inb4 non-exit

Seems like the fact of helping with Tor is enough for them.
>>
>>61865122
Aus internet does DNS level blocking too; theyve blocked pirate bay

Just set your router DNS to 8.8.8.8; the government cannot adjust your DNS content if you're not receiving your DNS queries from the isp
>>
>>61865724
Thanks for the protip ausbro
>>
>>61843166
http://datagenetics.com/blog/march12012/index.html
>>
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>>
Page 8? Please.
>>
>>61850821
>>61850919
master troll
>>
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Game where you can be a Hacker/Learn the Skill Hacking?

So far I have:
-Deus Ex
-System Shock 1+2
-Shadowrun
-Vampire Bloodlines
-Neocron

and my mind cannot think of more right now
>>
>>61868131
idk looks like you're all set. try not to get attention from the feds though
>>
>>61868131
>>>/v/
>>
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Finally updated the imgur albums

>Cyberpunk Scenery
http://imgur.com/a/xMi2Q

>Cyberpunk Rooms
http://imgur.com/a/GmKjW

They can also be found on the ftp server now in the Cyberpunk directory under scenery and rooms.

As always, I'll make sure to update them regularly (took my a while now thanks to work and a fried brain..)
>>
>>61868200
I know, it was just a gentle way to bump the thread
>>
>>61868313
This fucking goes straight into favourites.
>>
post cyb webms
https://i.4cdn.org/wsg/1502111051991.webm
>>
I've rented a VPS with GNU/Linux, 60GB SSD and 1 GB RAM. What are some /cyb/ or /sec/ things I can do with it?
>>
I fell for the meme

Infosec engineer here

Not the kind you are thinking of, I don't manufacture malware, I don't investigate code issues

I manage credit card data, and secure networks to certain standards. I run vulnerability scans and setup clients for a monthly or quarterly scan of all of their routers, firewalls, and nodes behind the devices...
I also build their company scanning portal to what they need

I find out why scans failed, I find out why network trafficdoesn't work

I collect logs from many systems after a breach and send the data to investigators. I lock down and secure networks

>A-am I "cyber punk:" enough for you /g/?
>>
how do i push the length onto the stack and then pop it back into rdx without it segfaulting? i know that's the cause. it's getting a much bigger number out than i put in

section .data
HW: db "Hello, world",10
HWLen equ $-HW

section .text

Print:
pop rdx

push rcx ; save registers
push rbx
push rax

mov rax,4 ; sys_write
mov rbx,1 ; stdout
mov rcx,OutputBuffer ; define buffer location
int 80h ; system call

pop rax ; restore registers
pop rbx
pop rcx
ret

global _start
_start:
nop
mov rax, HWLen
Dec:
mov bl, [HW+rax-1]
mov byte [OutputBuffer+rax-1], bl
dec rax
jnz Dec
mov rdx,HWLen
push rdx
call Print
jmp Quit

Quit:
mov rax,1 ; sys_exit
mov rbx,0 ; exit code 0
int 80h ; system call

section .bss
OBMaxLen equ 256
OutputBuffer: resb OBMaxLen
>>
>>61868729
nm just realized it's because calling a routine pushes the address of where you left onto the stack, so that's what i'm accessing. thanks cyb
>>
>>61868903
That'll do it. Glad you figured it out.
Generally speaking the value of your registers are preserved even across CALLs so it should be sufficient just to load up your GP registers with parameters beforehand without tinkering with the stack. However, any additional parameters pushed to the stack can be accessed via [rbp+whatever].
>>
>>61842392
anyone know what the password for gentoo is on hacking.moe? In the /sec/ irc channel they said that you can apparently sftp to it but the password apparently isn't "lovelain".
>>
>>61849317
>tfw have to lookup answers on most CTFs
>tfw the only I thing I got through by myself was overthewire Bandit
>>
>>61869716
you got through the last level by yourself?
>>
>>61868723
How did this happen to you?

I'm learning how to RE and MA, and I don't want to end up as an overglorified sysadmin.
>>
>>61870079
You mean the SSH/Connection Closed because shell isn't a shell?

Yeah, the "more" gave it away. But, I had to lookup some vi shit, because all I know is "I, esc, :wq"

Or do you mean the super secret level 27 that might or might not exist?
>>
>>61868131
Uplink
>>
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>>61868313
>this pic not included n cyberpunk rooms
>>
>>61871680
good old pirate bay dragon dildos
>>
>>61871680
comfy dildo?
>>
>>61868723
Sounds pretty low life (depression) and high tech. Yeah that's cyberpunk. The sararyman type.
>>
<h1>alert("own3d");</h1>
>>
>>61868533
That was so cool

Also bumping
>>
>>61870149
It's what the industry actually does. Even if you spend your nights reverse engineering the most complex malware the odds are you will not find the people to give you the job doing it for a living and will end up working as a sysadmin trying to prevent data leaks from obvious attacks.
>>
>>61871680
I don't know why always this kind of room calls me.
>>
>>61843166
This was done by a foreign agent recently (past 2-3 decades.) Data was embedded in one/all of the RGB channels to where the image was not (notably) distorted.
>>
Is iprediaOS linux distro pretty secure? I heard it basically acts like a vpn it runs on the i2p network.

Im guessing I shouldnt use this to torrent or whatnot
>>
>>61855609
Replace the write head of your DVD writer with a green laser that literally burns holes in to a metal sheet.
You might need to lower the density of the disc. Dunno really.
You will definitely need to lower the speed of it.
You could burn holes right through the metal sheet or just dents in the sheet. Holes would be better for the next part.
After doing all this, coat the sheet in either plastic, resin or something else. The more chemically inert it is, the better. So don't be using cheap shit biodegradable plastics.
Now you need the reader.
Good luck with that.

Writing the data to disc should be done in a format that is trivial to reverse engineer, or at least comes with the spec for the data encoding ON the disc in some way, or another encoded metal sheet with small text and a magnifying logo next to it in case humans discover it in a thousand years after WW4 or whatever.
Realistically, a simple metal sheet in the same way would suffice. Etch the disc formatting on to it in the same way, coat it, put in the box with it.
You'll definitely need to do the writing different though. You would likely need to make this part manually. Highly unlikely you'd get a laser setup in a generic printer and slow it down enough to be useful.

I am sure I remember reading a company was going to do this with sheets of some material. Can't remember. Pretty sure it was either metal or ceramic.
>>
"Some mobile networks block connections to irc servers. Verizon is known to do this in some locations"

What did (((they))) mean by this?
>>
>>61873575

so av companies aren't hiring?
>>
>>61868664
Why did you rent it if you have no idea what you're using it for
>>
>>61868723
I don't envy your job

You're a little better than a ticket monkey
>>
>>61870323
>super secret level 27
I thought bandit was a basic series, I don't see them hiding an ultra leet challenge
>>
>>61868664
Same here. What do with VPS?

>>61874498
In my case, because it was 10$ a year. A YEAR.
At the moment its just a tor relay.
>>
>>61874354
This is the dumbest thing I have heard all day.
>>
>>61874498
It was cheap so I thought, why not? Just wanted something that is accessible on the www for fun
>>
>>61874616
The simplest and dumbest things work.
You status:
[x] rekt

It's the best and cheapest method of creating a system that will survive for generations.

The magnifying glass bit would help any future people see the data getting progressively smaller and know there is encoded data on it that needs to be read through microscope.
Of course, easier to just encode instructions on larger sheets of metal, even if it is bulkier.
You could make that the literal walls of the container for the discs.
Build a fucking temple for your works of art. Make your 10 million pictures of Richard Stallman look important in a thousand years.
>>
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So if we go to war with NK/Russia/whoever and I get drafted, if I know about computers will they let me become some sort of military hacker or am I pretty much doomed to be some expendable grunt?
>>
>>61874789
Shatter your legs in a FREAK accident.
Sure it will hurt. Get shitfaced on all kinds of drugs.

You'll be more likely to become said ultra hacker staring at screens then.
Or just shot on the spot because lol war conditions
>>
>>61874835
nope but nice try
https://i.4cdn.org/wsg/1502111051991.webm
>>
>>61874789
Having a STEM degree is always an easy ticket to not being a meatshield. Unless they are running critically low on meatshields then we are fucked.
>>
>>61874852
hey if i can become some sort of deus ex augmented super soldier i'd be more ok with getting some action
>>
>>61874852
Sit under a train then.
Legs be gone.

They'll not waste valuable materials to put one cripple in to the frontline.
They'r rather use their mind if they have a good one.
>>
>>61874789

depends on your asvab. you'll probably be cannon fodder or a drone pilot if you play a lot of video games.
>>
>>61871680
Now all he needs is Scoobs
>>
>>61874924
>>61874835
You're recommending he drop the quality of his life by significant margins in order to avoid what exactly?

Do you have any idea how the military works?

Do you know that 5% of all forces are front line? Of course you didn't. You think logistics, supplies, sigs, secpol, mechs, clarks, cooks just magically materialise while you churn people into killing machines?

You really think combat units aren't prepped and primed with specific drills, battle schools and constant exercises?

You honestly, truly, believe front line isn't EXCLUSIVELY reserved for turbo chads who WONT shit their pants when engagements happen?

You genuinely, unironically think officers will look at pasty, nerdy anon and determine he is a danger to his fucking team?

Jesus Christ.
>>
>>61875600
wew
>>
>>61875736
This was a good, useful and informative reply
>>
>>61874617
Mine too. I own a 4chan.something domain.
No, really.
>>
>>61876589
>use SET to scoop up 4chan pass login details
you might get a single successful hit twice a year, but its an idea none the less?
>>
>>61876869
oh. no. not for social engineering purposes.
i just wanted a domain so i dont have to remember an IP, so i picked a 4chan.something for keks.
>>
>>61876902
lul fair enough
>>
i have no motivation to study today

i am going to spend the rest of the arvo watching mr robot
>>
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This is pretty cyb
>>
>>61877061
what the fuck would you even use this for
>>
>>61877762
handy on the go porn
>>
>>61876062
ty
>>
>>61877061
That's pretty cool anon. But why Windows 98 of all operating system.
>>
>>61842392
Nothing to hide, nothing to fear
>>
>>61878366
I imagine 95 would have been too much of a cunt to install with boot floppies and all
>>
>>61860283
There is a set of pictures but I don't have it, unfortunately.
>>
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>>61875600
As >>61875736 said, wew

Of course I am not recommending he do that. It was just a joke.
You do remember jokes from before society collapsed?
I know we live in a world where you can get arrested for funny jokes on Twitter and if you mess with football you can get shit on by the government, but jokes can still be told.

What you do do even in general is keep a running portfolio of all your work you do with data scrubbed from it and Lorem Ipsum'd.
Any and all pictures replace with Jimmy Wales. Even if they aren't people.
If you ever decide to move job (or get it thrust on you), portfolios get you places silly pieces of paper and a university name won't.

>>61877061
I've been kinda wanting to make something like this with a small computer project.
Simple strap, screen over USB or VGA/HDMI so it can go longer distance, compared to the pins.
Buttons and touchscreens (and power) would be more of an issue to deal with.
Make a rolling storage for the cables, which would be taped together so they aren't hanging all about the place.

Either that or just make the entire thing easy to remove from arm instead of making screen detachable.
You could design it in such a way that the underside of the strap with the computer acts like a stand for the screen, changing the strap position to make it lower or higher.
Would make a fun outdoorsy exploration device that doesn't get in the way like shitty smartphones do.

Equally could just buy a smartphone strap and be done with it in the delivery time.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯. I DUNNO LOL.
>>
>>61880038
I can't help but think a full blown autist tier cyberdeck would be way more useful. At least then you can get a full keyboard, which the 98/rpi combo I posted is missing, and a real os, which a smartphone will be missing
>>
>>61880585
Could be done.
You could do it in such a way that the keyboard could fold over itself and actually become the case for it as well.
At least that way it makes it practical to carry around with you, but still fully functional.

I still have those little folding PDA keyboards sitting literally just right of me actually. **
I always thought those things were really neat.
Also have one of those rubber folding keyboards.
They work, but FUCK are they bulky. Thinking about it, the requirements for something like that far outweigh its usefulness. I'd need to buy full waterproof gear and go hiking innariver to make any use of it.
I'll stick with my simple mechanicals.

* Tidying this room up and building a walk-in closet storage space for everything. Can't wait.
Iterated over every possible way to make storage efficient in this room and that is the best. Gives a fuckton of storage while also making a useful wall to lean things against. It's all win-win.
Will finally be able to put all those spare laptops in there too, instead of under the table on the floor to the right of my feets.
I'll get around to gutting them and using the spare parts one day.
>>
>>61880671
Just strap a GPD Win to your arm.
>>
>>61880671
>Thinking about it, the requirements for something like that far outweigh its usefulness.
Maybe I shouldn't buy a umpc...
>>
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REMINDER

>Harden your network the right way
>Obscure your identity

REMIDNER
>>
>>61880722
Buy one if it fits your use-case or if it looks neat and you have spare money.
I only bought it through sheer novelty. But I still keep it around just in case of emergencies and there was a situation where I did need to rough-it for a period. (unlikely society will collapse that hard, but it could happen)

>>61880720
Doable. Na fuck that, I'll just strap my netbook on there. Might need to gain a few thousand pounds for it to fit on my arm. Wish me luck!
Time to order me 10,000 pop tarts!

One thing that would be pretty neat is a really wide screen but thin like phone.
Say double the height of a typical smartphone.
I don't know if that exists, very unlikely. It's the nichest of niches.
Not sure if you could connect 2 smartphone screens end to end in such a way it would be useful. Touchscreen wouldn't work seamlessly without quite a bit of work behind its controller.
I don't think that would matter much, I'd very likely use the main screen as the interface and make a virtual touchpad for movement over the rest of the screen.
Already use one of those on a tablet to save having to remove my hand from the edge when drawing.
If you could get it set up in such a way where you could fold one screen over the other, it would be cool. Or even slide it underneath so you can always have one screen open and only 2 if you need more space to multi-task.
>>
>>61880748
I would love to go full paranoid but the patterns on the 3rd post seems overkill to me. I know you never know and that better paranoid than sorry, but adapting your meat life to your internet life seems overdoing to me.
>>
>>61874433
It's more supply and demand. If you have the skills go for it. It's just the fact the vast majority of the industry doesn't do it even if they have the skills.
>>
>>61880826
> it looks neat and you have spare money.
This is literally all.

I'll cook up a few different SD cards for different OS for fun is the plan

>95
>C64 emulator
>maybe Gentoo
>98 so I can play diablo and aoe
I don't fucking know why I want it I've just fallen for the meme after they got shilled on here, and someone is selling an old one from 08 for cheap on eBay
>>
>>61842392
I've read the resources/essentials on the page here, but I still have one question: What program can I use to encrypt my SMS? I use Signal, because it merges SMS and data messages in one thread. Is there something more secure with these features?
>Sound crypto
>Data/SMS in one thread
>Media sending

Anything out there that isn't compromised or published by crooks? Or is Signal really the best I have?
>>
How do I get an IRL cyberdeck? Start with a tablet but what do I add to it?
>>
>>61881753
You add whatever you need. It's a tool, not an end.
>>
Nope page 8
>>
>>61883011
Nope again.
>>
>>61883989
Thanks for bumpage.

About cyberdecks you might want to look into EEG for input. Hard but possible.
>>
is it reasonable to get projector for displaying cool /cyb/ pictures?
i thought about printing some of pics from >>61868313, have them framed and put on the wall, but i think projecting it would be more /cyb/

inb4 sunlight, i've got sunblinds on almost constantly
>>
>>61884378
Do both.

High tech (projector, screensaver, background changer) Low life (printing them out and putting them up like posters)
>>
>>61884397
can modern projectors handle long (or constant) time of use?
can anyone recommend one in reasonable price?
>>
>>61884434
You could get one of these (commercials incoming)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Om3iC_QN8Eg
>>
What do you guys make of this thread from last night: >>61875274? It seems like advertisers figured out a way to ruin the web more than ever by misrepresenting 3rd party resources as 1st party resources. Do you guys think this will actually come to pass on a larger scale and if so how do you plan on dealing with it?
>>
>>61884613
>cheapest one is 200$

well, i guess i'll just print those pics...
>>
>>61884434
Alternatively raster scan a blue green laser across a lumed wall. A demo is om YouTube and the image persistence will be about 24 hours.
>>
>>61884434
Basically you can fix any generic low-use projector with a decent fan to cool it.
Will be noisier, but the white noise from it might be right up your alley.
Bonus points if you connect it up to a controller that various the speed of the fan to make it sound like wind.
>>
>>61884644
Nice dubs.

Only solution I can think of is for you to self-host the websites JS in question, or use services like Archive.is

Most sites rarely change their JS. For the ones you actually use, it would be trivial to find the code that is responsible for their actual website and that which is for ads.
The ones you don't, throw it under shit like Archive.is or download it manually and view in an offline browser.
>>
>>61885494
>Most sites rarely change their JS. For the ones you actually use, it would be trivial to find the code that is responsible for their actual website and that which is for ads.
That was listed in the thread as one of the possible ways to fight it. Only problem is if the reverse proxy service can make changes to the JS, though that may only affect the normal whitelist option brought up in the thread rather than saving the JS you want to run on your machine and running it with an addon like Greasemonkey. It is possible though that saving the scripts on your side may not work if they start changing all the URLs to help further disguise the ads, as the URL you're requesting would no longer match up with what the reverse proxy is expecting.

>The ones you don't, throw it under shit like Archive.is or download it manually and view in an offline browser.
I think that would probably cause problems with many of the sites that break if you don't enable JS currently (ex. wanting to research a possible future purchase but menus and search features stop working).
>>
>>61885494
>>61884644
Even if the 1st party scripts keep changing (eg. jskjdfk.4chan.org to 45ii4ookl.4chan.org) we could develop a p2p system where anons could seed non-tracking pages to each other.

>go to 4chan.org/g
>find all the scripts and block them
>seed the now clean 4chan.org/g page.
>other people connect to your cleaned page

To view threads:
>fire up the p2p system for viewing threads
>connect to the latest clean snapshot from an anon
>refreshing to see new content is done by viewing a refreshed snapshot

It won't be perfect, but it could work using a special browser (think a tor-browser like program) that automatically grabs the latest cleaned snapshots of webpages to show.
>>
>>61885815
Could do it using a user script.
Preferably what it would do is load the site inside of a sandboxed iframe on top so it can prevent abuse.
Easy enough to remove headers that prevent iframes from loading sites.
I use an extension to kill iframe blockers since I made a page that hosts multiple child pages so I can check them all quickly.
>>
>>61868723
offensive security is MUCH more fun than defensive...
>>
>>61885815
Wouldn't matter of the URLs change.
All you need to do is host a local version of the script.
Nobody besides large sites that can afford the server overhead will bother to write procedurally generated webpages that are never the same for anyone.

All you need is a working version of the site that does:
quick reply
extension stuff
captcha
You could embed it in to the page with a userscript or extension.
Hell, extensions that exist for the site already pretty much do that anyway.
Just need to do the same thing for other sites.
You could write a userscript that intercepts every page request that comes from with no referrer (most likely to be a URL request and not an in-page request), then check a list to see if it has a sanitized JS, if not, there could be a community site that hosts cleaned JS.
Or the P2P method. The site version would almost certainly be attacked by scummy site operators.
>>
>>61886527
>Nobody besides large sites that can afford the server overhead will bother to write procedurally generated webpages that are never the same for anyone.
They don't have to. Instart Logic's service is already rewriting URLs for third party resources to trick your browser into seeing them as first party resources. It would be trivial for them to rewrite the URLs for first party resources as well.
>>
>>61842392
Cyberpunk has nothing to do with cybersecurity.
>>
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Do you separate your online identity by os? device? for example keep professional life on phone and private life on laptop/PC?
>>
>>61886800
This is fine an a nice easy way to do it, but as soon as you've connected both to your home network then everything you've done to isolate your online/work ID's becomes obsolete.
>>
>>61886864
I would not use wifi, only 3/4g, but would being in the visinity of the network effect it?
>>
>>61886969
No it wouldn't, you also have to consider how you are paying for the phone/home internet service provider. Are they both being paid for with the same card/bank account? Is your mobile phone registered to you (your home address)?

Obviously this is pushing it but it should be a consideration.
>>
>>61886638
But you don't need to care about any of that anyway.
All you need to do is block 100% of the scripts on a site, then only unblock scripts either by a user-script extension, or a user-script that embeds another script from a local server on 127.0.0.1

Obviously you need to first get the functional scripts that deal with the actual sites UI and not ads.
If a site obfuscates this on top of this service, you do a trace in the element inspection tools to find out where an ads content came from, ignore those scripts.
If you don't want to do that part, you just ignore the site or use a separate service / offline system to view the site.
Some content isn't worth the hassle.
Only sites that will implement this are the scummiest, bullshitting sites anyway.
>>
>>61887428
>But you don't need to care about any of that anyway.
Yeah, you do. If they rewrite all the addresses for first party resources like they do all the addresses for ads every time page is requested, then whatever copy you have isn't going to match up with what their revere proxy is expecting and considers a valid page request. I don't see any way that could turn out other than killing whitelist based filtering for anyone who isn't okay with spending more time messing with the filter settings than they would using the page they are trying to load.
>>
>>61868313
Most excellent stuff, thanks!
>>
>>61887775
Oh yeah you are right, I misread that bit.

Well, surely you just simply need to nuke the adblocker detector?
Inject script on every page.
If it detects their detector, delete it from existence.
It seems entirely based on a script executing to be able to detect if something funky is happening in the client end, then it throws a shitfit with resources.

In fact, now that I look at the actual discussion on the ublock git, that's what they are doing. Needing to do a bit of a hacky approach to it since Chrome lacks a before-execute feature like FF does (for now! SOON)
I might have a look in to it as well.
I've made a habit of live-rewriting others scripts for FUN or to add extra features.
>>
>>61842392
I can link some good guides to Libreboot installs and freeing your PMP if you want to add it to some part of the pastebins or OP post
>>
>>61874616
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/data-saved-quartz-glass-might-last-300-million-years/
>Data Saved in Quartz Glass Might Last 300 Million Years

>The prototype is made of a square of quartz two centimeters wide and two millimeters thick. It houses four layers of dots that are created with a femtosecond laser, which produces extremely short pulses of light.

So he is close.
>>
>>61885385
Here is a bit about such walls: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I6IqoSAtjb0
>>
>>61860006
You can have them do a Ceasar Cipher with the history linked to it. That is the usual introduction to encryption
>>
While we wait for direct neural interfaces these might be the things to have in your deep underground cyber bunker: http://www.darkroastedblend.com/2015/05/japanese-arcades-gundam-pods-other.html
>>
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>>61889118
Those have "pontential"
>>
>>61887199
>>61886969
>>61886864
>>61886800
OPSEC and compartmentalisation is hard. It's a shame it's not something taught
>>
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>>61889361
Am I on /d/ right now?
>>
>>61881640
Signal is crap sadly. I suggest https://github.com/SilenceIM/Silence if you want to encrypt SMSes only. Or something with OpenPGP support.
>>
>>61889472
Except it is. OPSEC and compartmentalization is pretty much the first thing you learn if you're really serious about the craft. The only way that someone doesn't learn about it in their first week studying security/hacking is if they're just messing around because they just finished watching Mr. Robot.
>>
What security stuff are you working on?
I'm writing a windows RPC fuzzer which decompiles the IDL of privileged services which have RPC servers and then generates an NDR20/NDR64 interface call to those servers based on which matches the IDL semantics and attempts to provide values to parameters which hopefully cause an exploitable bug in the service.

I've almost gotten RPC working via raw ALPC/LPC system calls, and after that I plan to make the semantic engine work better with DCOM objects.
>>
>>61889751
Compartmentalization is hard to teach because it's a very general concept that can encompass many elements that fall outside of standard info sec

The concept is expensive and complex if you're going to implement in a larger scope
>>
>>61889862
I agree.
>>
>>61844985
this, seriously I cant even play mobile games in a car ride
>>
=== /Cyb/ News

>Inside China’s ‘skyscraper capital’
http://www.bbc.com/capital/gallery/20170809-inside-chinas-skyscraper-capital
Essentially, how a fishing village ended up as a cyberpunk metropolis with several sky scrapers built every year.
>>
>>61889832
>What security stuff are you working on?
Trying to reverse a proprietary network protocol/server. It's still early days, but I've already found tons of bugs and written a pretty sophisticated exploit.
>>
>>61842392
/// R E M I N D E R ///
Cyberpunk isn't about saving humanity, its about saving yourself.
>>
>>61890418
>saving humanity
Why would I want to do that when I'm probably better off without most of those dumb fucks?
>>
Whats the most lightweight linux distro that just werks. Dont care too much about the systemd meme I just need something to use on my laptop. Im currently running linux mint.
>>
>>61889751
Yeah being serious about the craft isn't the same as it being readily available to learn.

Gitgud is not a valid response.
>>
>>61890832
BunsenLabs
>>
>>61890692
Your answer is here >>61891195
>>61891195
>>61891195
It's the replacement to #! Linux, which I could get to run on some awfully underpowered gear
>>
I'm feeling confident I can get both exams of the CCNA Cyber ops this year! I think I'll take one next month, which means I need to order the second textbook asap and get my shit moving!
>>
>trusting "secure" and/or infosec-related distros
enjoy your backdoors, faggots
>>
>>61891305
I comp isnt that underpowered. Its cpu is roughly i3 equivalent with on board graphics and 4gigs of ram. I just dont want somethink like ubuntu full of bloatwear crap I dont want. I installed lubuntu I like how things werk but I like how linux mint looks better.
>>
>>61891305
>>61892097
Ooh I kind of like the asstectics. How do I increase the security with bunsenlabs? Also I want to use this botnet 10 theme how do I use? I dont like bonet10 but I like how it looks
>>
>>61868533
You should watch the TED talk by him if you haven't, it's fascinating. One of the good newer TED talks worth watching.
>>
>>61892167
>>61892097
Im confused what you are actually asking for
>>
>>61891790
Good luck.

>>61891854
>What is open source?
>What is auditing?
At least we can audit, whilst you Winsluts can't.
>>
>>61892486
idk in the op there a pastebin about increasing security in the linux os. "hardedn your os" i think it was called. How wouldi do it with Bunsenlabs.

Also how to i install themes
>>
>>61842392
How can you be sure your compiler isn't backdoored if you didn't write it yourself, /faggotsec/?
>>
>>61892595
>Implying I didn't write it myself.
>>
>>61892622
>implying you did
You don't even know how to implement a tokenizer, faggit. You'd never be able to write a compiler.

How do you know the standards of your favorite language aren't backdoored if you didn't write THEM yourself? What if the string formatting function has some code execution vuln implemented into it by design and you don't even know it?
>>
>>61892688
>Tfw I'm actually Terry.
>>
>>61892486
>>61892567
also which one version do i download? it is a 64 bit computer. it has a intel cpu but its not an i3 it was like i686 or something i know its equvilaent to i3 though
>>
>>61890181
already know without reading it that it's because of the massive real estate speculation that's rampant in china. it's just started to slow down as people are realizing it may not be the smartest idea to put all your assets in apartments
>>
>>61892567
>>61892741
You do it the same way. Linux is Linux is Linux at the end of the day.

I think you should stick to Ubuntu or maybe Debian. Bunsenlabs is an extension of crunch bang; it was never beginner friendly
>>
>>61892566
>At least we can audit, whilst you Winsluts can't.
I'm a linux user... auditing doesn't mean shit when a random backdoored package could be installed during an upgrade
>>
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>>61892896
Then be more vigilant you projecting retard.
Just because you're slow, doesn't mean everyone else is.
>>
make up your own moving pasta, fuck you. i guess regular op had died, oh well i guess ill make the pasta from now on. its going to focus more on sec, because because.

>>61893035
>>61893035
>>61893035
>>61893035
>>
>>61892793
eh i can always learn. My biggest issue is that i dont know which version to install. For the other distros i used it only had the options 32 bit or 64 bit
>>
>>61890618
Yup, that's why we're /cyb/. Zuckerberg was right and is basically living the dream.
>>
>>61893055
>>61892927
>>61892896
>>61892793
>>61892763
>>61892741
>>61892739
>>61892688
The thread is dead, long live the thread: >>61893065
No, I'm still alive.
>>
>>61893062
True. Are you using it as your main os or in a vm?
>>
>>61893077
Fucking lol. So whose deleting theirs?
>>
>>61893201
I didn't even know there was another one.
Which one went up first?
>>
>>61893232
Yours had an extra reply than mine so I nuked mine

I honestly thought you'd died
>>
>>61893255
I've just been exceptionally busy, even too busy for shitposting.
Thread posts: 318
Thread images: 29


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