isolationsandhatred
isolationsandhatred
storm crow is better than black lotus
205 posts
Pierce, they/them, 23. naus enjoyer, locksport enthusiast. ask me about food
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isolationsandhatred · 7 months ago
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"Kiwi egg x-ray" cause someone had been talking about kiwis with me on Discord and the pictures of how large their eggs are compared to the rest of them are absolutely absurd
last google search, go
um. Tag four people.
what do they make sewer tunnels out of
@ncc1701ohno @affixjoy @the-magpieprince @twinkboimler
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isolationsandhatred · 9 months ago
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Do you re-mem-bah
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isolationsandhatred · 1 year ago
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Beyond lockpicking: learn about the class-breaks for doors, locks, hinges and other physical security measures
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Deviant Ollam is runs a physical security penetration testing company called The Core Group; in a flat-out amazing, riveting presentation from the 2017 Wild West Hackin’ Fest, Ollam – a master lockpicker – describes how lockpicking is a last resort for the desperate, while the wily and knowledgeable gain access by attacking doors and locks with tools that quickly and undetectably open them.
Ollam’s techniques are just laugh-out-loud fantastic to watch: from removing the pins in hinges and lifting doors away from their high-security locks to sliding cheap tools between doors or under them to turn thumb-levers, bypass latches, and turn handles. My favorite were the easy-exit sensors that can be tricked into opening a pair of doors by blowing vape smoke (or squirting water, or releasing a balloon) through the crack down their middle.
But more than anything, Ollam’s lecture reminds me of the ground truth that anyone who learns lockpicking comes to: physical security is a predatory scam in which shoddy products are passed off onto naive consumers who have no idea how unfit for purpose they are.
When locksport began, locksmiths were outraged that their long-held “secret” ways of bypassing, tricking and confounding locks had entered the public domain – they accused the information security community of putting the public at risk by publishing the weaknesses in their products (infosec geeks also get accused of this every time they point out the weaknesses in digital products, of course).
But the reality is that “bad guys” know about (and exploit) these vulnerabilities already. The only people in the dark about them are the suckers who buy them and rely on them.
So when Ollam reveals that thousands of American cop cars, fleet cars, and taxis can all be unlocked and started using a shared key that you can literally buy for a few bucks at Home Depot, or that most elevators can be bypassed with a similarly widely available key, or that most file cabinets and other small locks can be opened with a third key, or that most digital entry systems can be bypassed in seconds with a paperclip (or another common physical key), he’s doing important (and hilarious!) work.
He’s such an engaging speaker and the subject matter is nothing short of fantastic. There are a hundred heist novels in this talk alone. It’s definitely my must-watch for the week.
https://boingboing.net/2019/06/14/fools-paradise-lost.html
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isolationsandhatred · 1 year ago
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Beyond lockpicking: learn about the class-breaks for doors, locks, hinges and other physical security measures
Tumblr media
Deviant Ollam is runs a physical security penetration testing company called The Core Group; in a flat-out amazing, riveting presentation from the 2017 Wild West Hackin’ Fest, Ollam – a master lockpicker – describes how lockpicking is a last resort for the desperate, while the wily and knowledgeable gain access by attacking doors and locks with tools that quickly and undetectably open them.
Ollam’s techniques are just laugh-out-loud fantastic to watch: from removing the pins in hinges and lifting doors away from their high-security locks to sliding cheap tools between doors or under them to turn thumb-levers, bypass latches, and turn handles. My favorite were the easy-exit sensors that can be tricked into opening a pair of doors by blowing vape smoke (or squirting water, or releasing a balloon) through the crack down their middle.
But more than anything, Ollam’s lecture reminds me of the ground truth that anyone who learns lockpicking comes to: physical security is a predatory scam in which shoddy products are passed off onto naive consumers who have no idea how unfit for purpose they are.
When locksport began, locksmiths were outraged that their long-held “secret” ways of bypassing, tricking and confounding locks had entered the public domain – they accused the information security community of putting the public at risk by publishing the weaknesses in their products (infosec geeks also get accused of this every time they point out the weaknesses in digital products, of course).
But the reality is that “bad guys” know about (and exploit) these vulnerabilities already. The only people in the dark about them are the suckers who buy them and rely on them.
So when Ollam reveals that thousands of American cop cars, fleet cars, and taxis can all be unlocked and started using a shared key that you can literally buy for a few bucks at Home Depot, or that most elevators can be bypassed with a similarly widely available key, or that most file cabinets and other small locks can be opened with a third key, or that most digital entry systems can be bypassed in seconds with a paperclip (or another common physical key), he’s doing important (and hilarious!) work.
He’s such an engaging speaker and the subject matter is nothing short of fantastic. There are a hundred heist novels in this talk alone. It’s definitely my must-watch for the week.
https://boingboing.net/2019/06/14/fools-paradise-lost.html
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isolationsandhatred · 1 year ago
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i can’t find words for my anger right now so here’s a collection of thoughts that share the sentiment
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isolationsandhatred · 1 year ago
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you can taste the fucking irony
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isolationsandhatred · 1 year ago
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Ever seen a poodle moth?
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isolationsandhatred · 1 year ago
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ttrpg is bad actually because it makes you do things like ‘make fanmixes for a character literally five people have heard of' 
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isolationsandhatred · 1 year ago
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isolationsandhatred · 1 year ago
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I don't give a fuck about baseball when is america going to recognize sitting on the toilet as it's favourite pastime
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isolationsandhatred · 1 year ago
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we need to bring back inviting people over for cake and coffee. my grandma used to do that all the time and I think it's a lost art
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isolationsandhatred · 1 year ago
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S.686 - RESTRICT Act
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isolationsandhatred · 1 year ago
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isolationsandhatred · 1 year ago
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isolationsandhatred · 1 year ago
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i keep thinking about that one blogger on here who mentioned applying to 80+ jobs and still not getting a single callback
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isolationsandhatred · 1 year ago
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Like to STAB
Reblog to STAB AGAIN
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isolationsandhatred · 1 year ago
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“You simply cannot fit more America into a single incident than a man dying a horrifying death in protest of war crimes while a first responder screams at cops to stop pointing their guns at him and go get fire extinguishers. If you were to pick a single moment in history to sum up the essence and expression of the US empire, that would be it.”
Caitlin Johnstone, The Most American Thing That Has Ever Happened
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