I am working on OH. I am likely going to change hosting because the downtime has been bullshit
Caleb Mitchell
Also, I want to get a mailing list going like John Gilmore and the Cypherpunks had back in the day...any input would be helpful there.
Ryan Hall
I have no input because I know nothing about that.
But it sounds cool, and I like to be a part of it.
Grayson Wilson
I wrote a udp flooder in python. May i join your club?
Julian Williams
Man, that black hat opsec video was interesting as fuck, thanks for sharing
Ryder Cooper
Of course. For being smart enough to realise UDP is the vulnerable protocol, and for having the chops to cook that up, I personally award you two gold stars.
Tyler Morris
I know it's an old, low-tech thing to do but I make a Cyberpunk zine that I put out locally. If any of you want to add something (opinion, art, poetry, whatever) shoot me an email at [email protected]. I don't put it online but I print 30-50 copies of every issue and they almost always sell out at the store I distribute them through. As long as it's cyberpunk-esq it'll likely see print.
Jace Nelson
>(opinion, art, poetry, whatever) cyberpunks are techno weenies and degenerate artfag normies. 0 technical.
Christopher Gray
Is this cyberpunk?
Camden Baker
And why do you think it is
Carter Jackson
>USB-enabled anal beads
And I thought I'd seen everything.
Aiden Peterson
Awesome! IWhen it is up and running, information will be here.
Sure; it isn't my club though; I started OH as a place for just about everyone.
Glad you enjoyed it. The send video from Hope is incredible as well. Probably one of the most important talks to me\. Nemesis: STARS... That is fucking awesome.
Low tech means of communication seems to be growing in value these days; what you are doing is important, so thank you.
I agree it was. It can be more though.
When I think f what the Cypherpunk movement did in the 1990's in response to much less, I find it depressing that the efforts from a new generation to step up and fight are so fractured.
This is how shit goes to garbage; the Cypherpunks inspire me, but who looks back in the future and sees a equal resistance to issues now to spur resistance then?
If I have to fight alone I will, but one is easy to break, and that breaking falls to waste and ruin if there is none to build from the sacrifice.
That thing is likely to get all and carry all types of viruses if it gets plugged into too many hosts.
Henry Anderson
OK, you asked for it... === /sec/ News:
>Lovense sex toy app recorded and stored nearby sounds bbc.com/news/technology-41969001 >A smart sex toy-maker has acknowledged that a bug with its app caused handsets to record and store sounds made while its vibrators were in use. >Lovense was alerted to the issue by a Reddit user who had discovered a lengthy recording on their phone.
They toy may possibly be smart; the programmers were not. Unless this was to gain an edge on people for blackmailing purposes.
Easton Price
>a bug with its app >a bug I guess that's just simple telemetry. Device creators wanted feedback from their users, they just forgot to ask for consent. Big deal nowadays.
Mason Parker
>wanted feedback from their users, In the form of grunts and moans
Blake Miller
Which video?
Jayden Torres
is programming a useful skill to be part of the club?
Juan Fisher
>people get butthurt because some ultimately irrelevant company recorded them busting a nut >they don't give a single fuck about Google tracking their every move and creating a dossier on them that they use to target ads
Josiah Brown
Does anyone know where I can find a reference manual for website security? I know enough to get around, I just need a compendium to sift through.
Yes, and it is useful for a lot more than that. Automating everyday tasks saves hassle.
Blake Fisher
but programming ask for order, discipline, rules, standards, security, reliability and hierarchy. It's the complete opposite to Cyberpunk. The only in common programming and Cyberpunk had is that both use computers and technology.
Nathaniel Cook
Are you daft, mate? Are you just looking to find an excuse not to learn programming?
Ethan Cruz
How do you even use technology properly without knowing programming? You don't want to be a cyberpunk, you want to be a cyberloser.
Brandon Price
your dum
Austin Sanders
>You don't want to be a cyberpunk, you want to be a cyberwank.
@63367693 >Guarantee replies Here's a -1 (you)
Asher Howard
PROGRAMMING HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH CYBERPUNK.
Landon Gutierrez
>but programming ask for order, discipline, rules, standards, security, reliability and hierarchy. It may ask for it but it won't always get it with me.
Anyways, how else to forge that Kuang Grade Mark 11 penetration program?
Thomas Ward
You just want to be a skiddie and not feel bad about it.
Hudson Murphy
OH fucked? Unable to determine how to post. "New Blog Post" redirects to */display_enter and then back to the page it directed from.
Brody Bell
Net neutrality. How is that a pro cyberpunk ideal?All it involves is some higher government telling companies big or small on how to handle their data. What
Carson Brown
What is the most cyberpunk drug?
Zachary Cooper
Nootropics probably. There's a Russian one which makes it seem more underground or something.
Henry Lewis
There's a few Russian ones. Transhumanism is really big over (t)here.
Gabriel Hughes
Really? Tell us more.
Jose Hall
How to Tor in China? Meek is almost unusable. I've been waiting for a circuit for an hour
Jaxson Garcia
Open ended, in the interest of time and efficiency, what are you most interested in. The scene or the drugs?
Logan Sanchez
I'd love to hear about the scene
Brayden Roberts
Is it true that...
>the entire TOR onion network is maintained by the FBI and NSA? >all VPNs are botnets? >just using TOR makes your ISP put you in a list? >FBI is also trying to mess around Freenet?
Easton Richardson
why aren't you downloading and using cia malware, Sup Forums
Joshua Parker
xDDD
Nathaniel Harris
try on yourself and tell us
Jayden White
Russia's populace has a penchant for exploring the vibrationally low and darker areas of life (very diverse online communities compared to Western ones -- I would imagine because their lives have less escapes and so they must focus on the dark instead of escape it), one of these is transhumanism. It's an umbrella term for many different "sects" centered around optimism for the human condition and a focus on improving humanity's abilities through external means, as opposed to the West's reemerging focus on internal means such as cognitive behavioral therapies, meditation, etc. A few notable examples are: immortalists/cryonicists (there is a distiniction between these two, but it escapes me at the moment), or "anti-agers" who wish to extend their lives indefinitely and end all disease through advances in biotechnology; the cybernetics, who shan't need an explanation; and cosmists, who wish for intergallactic colonization at any means. Even these groups are just labels on abstract ven diagram circles. The multitude of groups involved in transhumanist pursuits don't fall into a clear label and strict dogma, they pick and choose what technologies fit their idealogies instead of taking the more religious approach of absolute truths -- albeit spiritual pursuits are not cast to the wayside and are an important piece in all of them (a fractal of the Russian culture as a whole, who is very religious).
IMHO, it seems many of these "movements" are cults and just fanatical beliefs fostered by the crushing hopelessness of their environment. The ideals are very optimistic, but most forget that such a bias can blind one to very real obstacles that will get in the way of their plans (see: human nature. Russia has a terrible corruption and quality of life crisis, so one can even say that this is their escape.).
Two of the more "well-known" (within the sphere of Russian Transhumanism) organizations are: transhumanism-russia.ru 2045.com/
Elijah Jenkins
Cool stuff. Do peope do any bodymods there besides the "normal" ones like magnets and RFID chips?
Carter Price
There is a lot of time with no better use, so the quantity of hackers is much larger, but personally I haven't seen any wacky mods. In this respect they are lucky, they have no burgeoning media empire to keep them sedated. All their internet is good for is knowledge and mobile apps.
Jeremiah Lopez
>the entire TOR onion network is maintained by the FBI and NSA? Truth is, the more nodes you have there, the more you can control/attack the infrastructure. If you add the scare campaigns that have been pushed since a few years, and the lack of material that can't be found on clearnet, yeah, the less you use it, the more it can be controlled. So the only advice is, GO USE IT, it will make their job actually harder. The least you use it, the more their job is easier. With proper measures, tor is still secure. Insecurities relies on programs you run onto it (like Firefox bundle etc..) so make new services they can't exploit, and the whole network will be safer. >all VPNs are botnets? VPNs can still see your traffic, and they have your billing data. If you pay with bitcoin it's somehow ok, they are your new ISP and same isssues of regular ISP applies. If you paid with CC or paypal, you might be pwned. When you realize that in 2000 +17 you can turn every "smart" device connected into a botnet, you will laugh at the idea of paying for a vpn. >just using TOR makes your ISP put you in a list? Yes, you will be in a list, but who's gonna really go after that list ? Budgets are not so deep. Among many many many other people. So if you're not doing serious shit there, don't bother. Really. Nobody gives a fuck you are using TOR. Local admins might still care, so watch out if you're connecting from university/college account. >FBI is also trying to mess around Freenet? dunno about this one, I guess so, but I'm not a freefag.
Brayden Anderson
I've run a high capacity Tor relay for years and nobody ever bothered me.
Cameron Martin
>What is the most cyberpunk drug? Japanese green tea. Served in a proper tea house. Pic. related.
Ayden Gonzalez
What would you say is the best security setup? You seem to know a fair bit so would be interesting to hear how you would go about it on a personal level
Hunter Roberts
Alright, two things here anons. >1st A great learning resource for cyber security is 0x00sec.org Lots of people willing to freely teach/learn/share information of all kinds, and they don't all have their heads stuck up their asses like most hacking forums. >2nd Does anyone happen to have a full copy of the Strategic Intelligence Network (SIN) TOR site that was taken offline not too long ago? Im wanting the entire website. The php, the html, the javascript, everything. I'd like to recreate the site and perhaps bring it back up again once I add and update some much needed information as well as slightly improve the UI of the site.
Ayden Hill
Not that user, but you need to chain together a mixture of TOR, VPNs, VPSs, and Proxies. TOR needs to be the exit of all your traffic because there are many proxies that wont accept that traffic.
Austin Powell
I'm sorry, the "manifestos" are just too autistic to be real, they're a joke right?
Christopher White
>Just got accepted to do my thesis by making software to more efficiently test drugs on fish, already signed to continue work there afterwards. >Currently working on the side with machine learning in a multinational company, also running my own penetration testing company (physical & digital) >Only guy in this thread working with "cyberpunk" technology and concepts
This thread is so cringe and it hurts me something severe that you guys are shitting a good genre down with shit like what pointed out. Are you all 14 year old "l33t haxxors XD" ? Genuinely asking, not understanding this thread at all. If you guys actually are interested in this kind of future, how come non of you guys seem to actually have any actual experience in it?
Logan Lewis
>duuurrr hurrr, look at me I'm the only real cyber dood in here Fuck off faggot, some of us like to take part in the complete cancer of Sup Forums every once in awhile.
Though on the other hand, I do agree with you. This thread is fucking shit for what it is. College CS major here, experience in freelance pentesting and refined my colleges network security to a point. Id like to think I'm going to the right path with this and seeing that you have experience in the fields I'd like to get into, what are some things you wish you would have done or done differently when you were starting off?
Dylan Thomas
Yes, because I can't be fired from every place of employment ever and publicly shamed for my targeted google ads, where as if someone leaks a video of me wanking im done.
Luke Ortiz
Read my post again, i am starting off right now at least in my eyes which was my point; I'm the top 10% most cyber doods in here and i'm not even close to it.
However if there is anything i regret its honing my person skills this late. Knowing people makes everything easier. Both getting the right jobs and then excelling in them.
Also, forget almost everything you learnt at UNI, by my experience all of it is shit if you don't already understand programming properly which took me the better part of 5 years, and its even harder when they have crammed it full of ideas that are ONLY GOOD if you already understand everything about the language/structure.
Parker Ward
>the "manifestos" Which ones?
Isaac Adams
It depends vwhich page you are trying to post on. only Chatsubo allows new pposts.
Andrew Richardson
I have 11 years experience in it man.
So fuck off if you have nothing constructive to say.
I am tired of fuckwads wandering into my home and speaking bullshit about how elite or high minded they are compared to the thread.
If this is so, elevate the conversation or go get fucked by someone who is not your father,
Kevin Brown
>bbc.com please dont post porn sites
Angel Jenkins
If you want to get down to brass tacks, I manage the Cybersecurity Penetration Test and Vulnerability Assessment Lab for one of the top five companies in the industrial/energy sector; I penetration test some of the most valuable companies in the world.
If you are doing better, please tell me or shut your fucking mouth.
And I'm not worried about the OpSec issue; I am no
Robert Anderson
Solid reply, I'll take it to heart. I knew uni was shit for learning, im really only there for the connections and to get a piece of paper that says I did it. Looks like it's time to start indulging in my people skills then.
Blake Fisher
actually being a skiddie is cyberpunk. They lack order, professionalism, discipline and most are anarchist as fuck.
Wyatt Mitchell
And how would you go about doing that? The more information the better.
As can be seen when trying to use Tor with a meek bridge, which hides behind HTTPS CDNs. It's impossible to distinguish meek from regular access to CDN's, like ajax.aspnetcdn.com/ The Great Firewall however seems to have learned access patterns and sabotages Tor/meek connections
Tor over obfs4 works wonderfully if you have a private bridge Plain Tor = no chance
Owen Fisher
There's not really a set way to go about it. I mean, it seems pretty self explanitory. Layer your vpns and vpss, then use proxychains to route through proxies and throw tor at the end of the config file. Of course, you can really only do this in a linux distro. I dont know why I expect people from this thread to look into shit instead of requiring spoon feeding.
Hunter Harris
Most security focused Linux based operating systems don't incorporate all that shit, expecting people to automatically know this complex information is only making yourself look foolish.
Oliver Jenkins
Actually not a bad response. It's just about fucking up oppressors, not necessarily the tools or methods used.
>Huh! you want to impress me user? Why don't you reinvent the wheel?
Is basically Sup Forums-exclusive.
Henry Turner
The fact that you believe it to be complex makes you look like an autistic fuck. Go install Sup Forumsentoo and learn you some linux bitch.
Joshua Jenkins
Nah come on that is a pretty big problem with Sup Forums. Shilling the shit out of Linux or some other piece of software that pre-dates concerns about user friendliness because that makes you more 1337 but then ruthlessly shitting on anyone who takes the bait but can't figure everything out through sheer intuition.
It's just a double-edged sword of dickheadery.
Gavin Lewis
This, 100% this.
>Bruh, u not got gentoo liberoot thinkpad BSD BBQ??? Pffft, fucking botnet pajeet
Ian Ortiz
I'm And I could not stop laughing for at least a solid minute. The amount of truth behind this is truly immeasurable.
In all honesty though, Sup Forums memes aside, go learn debian jessie. Its got a great UI and can be both user friendly and unfriendly depending on what you want to do with it. Great platform to learn the ins and outs of linux and eventually upgrade to neckbeard status like the rest of us technosexual faggots.
Andrew Butler
huh the chinese invested in ai talent so they can tighten the totalitarian noose, what a surprise. they measure how random and anonymous the traffic is and if it hits a certain level of randomness then it's considered bad. seems like being too good at anonymity is costly and no longer hiding among the noise. maybe they need to design meek2 to settle on some pseudorandom predetermined traffic metrics instead of being truly random.
Andrew Bailey
still, I like cyberpunk. Who are their main enemies? corporate hackers? programmers in suits?
Landon Cook
>Who are their main enemies? those who are keeping you "low life".
It's funny that the cyberpunk aesthetic is in vogue; when really, it's a sign of an oppressed people.
Gavin Howard
How does the US government know where hackers come from? "Russian hackers" "Chinese hackers"
Mason Morris
Capitalists.
Angel Gonzalez
>Wanting companies to fuck consumers in the ass is cyberpunk I'm not sure about the OuterHeaven manifesto. At some parts its political slant is a bit off-putting. The piece seems overly partisan to me, singling out the right wing, when in reality neither side of the political spectrum is stranger to corruption and propaganda. I think part of my problem is the section "Corporate/Government domination of the internet could lead to disaster". I agree with the bit about net neutrality, but then the text becomes unclear as to what it's arguing for soon after. If the text is talking specifically about the internet/net neutrality, then I'd agree: republican propaganda regarding net neutrality is a big issue. But if that section is speaking of right wing propaganda in general, then I'd say the left has it just as bad, if not worse. Maybe it's all just semantics and inconsequential issues I'm seeing, but I can't help but feel that there's somehting that I'm just not getting. Regardless however, the advantage of anonymous groups like these is that so long as we can agree on a goal, we can work together regardless of differences in beliefs. I'm willing to work past these differences, so long as others are willing to do the same.
Christian Gray
Anonymous groups work when they are small. Anything an IRC channel deems necessary might not work.
Bentley Morgan
k and dissociatives in general
Samuel Thomas
speak for yourself
Levi Carter
Chatsubo was one of the rooms I tried and I'm not getting anything that implies I can make a new post. For a sanity check, you make a new post by using "New Blog Post?"
Leo Foster
Are there any offline password managers with two factor authentication? I only get results for one or the other when I try and look into it?
Anthony Ortiz
I share the concerns and opinions of this post.
Ethan Fisher
Im not trying to put you down or anything, but didn't the name OH give it away it was going to be political?
I mean you have at some point been exposed to metal gear solid, right? That is LITERALLY the reason for the name; it's a digital replica.
Cooper Clark
>tl;dr essay on why larping saves the world.
Jaxson Roberts
The issue is not that it 'political', it's that in the post it feels like maderas only whines about the right wing when the left is just as bad. Read again.
In MGS, OH was not sided, since it was all to fight the Patriots, and they were both the right and the left. And in this case the issue still persists, because both sides are corrupted to the roots and they both attempt to kill net neutrality, among other things, since it is what is convenient for them.
Isaac Carter
They don't. Deception is the name of the game.
Justin Jenkins
Keepassx has an option to ise a password protected cert file as the master key. Not EXACTLY tfa but kinda does it.
Zachary Carter
The most influential person in my life was my grandfather. He was a legend in the DC Intelligence community; he lived in Saudi Arabia for 30 years; his second wife was one of the dentists to the Royal Family.
I grew up looking at a picture on my grandfather's mantle of him shaking Bush Seniors hand at a social event in DC.
I gre w up Republican amongst a military family and the Intelligence community (my grandfather often brought me to Virginia and DC when he had to work).
I was raised to follow in his footsteps;We haven't spoken since the Invasion of Iraq; I knew Saddam wasn't in league with any islamic fundementalist group; he liked booze, western women and pornography too much.
My grandfather and I had a falling out over our views and haven't spoken years; I was meant to follow in his footsteps, but my conscience would not let me.
So I have a pretty broad view an open mind, and if you notice in my writing, I use blanket terms like "politicians" "political" and so on for most of the writing.
The inmmediate threat to the common populace is the Republican led US government(the US is the socio/economic/political trendsetter ofthe world for better or worse). They are self-serving of their own interests, ignorant and deceitful in a way that is dangerous to the common populace.
While the democrats are a problem as well (Obama betrayed many things I hold dear), the idea that the common populace wouldn't be in better stead with Democratic leadership is ridiculous; at least they are more leniant on social services, which as a person who makes a fair sum of money, I have no issue being taxed for.
Absolving the entire political system is not the most direct means of change, but acting as a group in a way that hurts the most immediate dangers (such as an operation that lessens the power of Republicans through a loss of elections) is; later. our issues could be handled, but triage is first.
Carter Butler
>>Corporate/Government domination of the internet could lead to disaster". I agree with the bit about net neutrality, but then the text becomes unclear as to what it's arguing for soon after.
The issue is that we have some huge issues that we have created for ourselves looming, and the Internet can be a facilitator of the communication and cooperation we will need in order to combat these issues' corporate control of the Internet could effect the effectiveness of that communciation and cooperation, and thus could endanger our species.
Throughout human history, an openess of information, cooperation and communication has fosterd growth and prosperity for our species.
There is a reason that most historians believe the Church held societty back during the Dark Ages, and there are clear reasons why after the Plague when the Church was weakened and the monks could more freely share their collections, that the Renaissance and Age of Enlightment came to pass.
It is a similar danger we face now; knowledge exists, but change neds to be institued amongst the majority of the populace, not just a small population holding knowledge.
Just as the Church told the commoner how to think back then, we risk an Internet where corporations hold the keys to the minds of the populace, facilitated by politic9ians who can change the rules of the infrastructure as they see fit.
If as some believe, they think that corporate control of the Internet will be the same as the beghinning, then they should look at history. As profitability or the ideas of profitability grow, marketing, commerce and the pursuit of financial incentive take hold.
These are ideas and behaviors that are dangerous to what the Internet was in the beginning, and will be less and less if we allow it; competition between oproporations will squash the infrastructure and it's freedoms under the feet of financial incentive.
Evan Perez
* If some believe that corporate control of the Internet will be the same later as it was in the the beginning,
*These are ideas and behaviors that are dangerous to what the Internet was in the beginning, and will be less and less what it was if we allow it.
James Miller
It's the Larpster!!!!
Larpster, at least I have the balls to put myself out their. I have nothing to gain by trying to make the world better; I could eaily fuck off with what many others believe uis success (six figure salary, secure financial/vocational future, hot girlfriend) and tell the world to fuck itself.
I suffered to get where I am; I went through a hell that would sound made up in the telling, I was raised mercilessly, I have died, I have been homeless and penniless among schizos, ex-convicts and junkies.... but instead of making me selfish, it taught me that you can't turn your back on the world.
Your comments are not clever. I occasionally find the "larping" thing funy, but more often I pity those saying it, because I have a sense that your hubris isn't enough to patch whatever frailness and failings that make you punch the keys, regardless of your skills.
Charles Taylor
If the government controls the companies what's to stop it from controlling you? Next thing you know it's illegal for you to block ads. Hey mate treat every data the same because big president told you so.
James Nelson
Again me. I don't mean I don't like net neutrality. Of course I like the idea of net neutrality, but the means proposed there are not the way in my view.