Hacking

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This is the community for all things hacking and cybersecurity, try keeping it legal. That said I don't take any responsibility for anything that happens/comes from this group but I will try being the best mod that I can to prevent anything from happening.

founded 4 years ago
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https://inscaptions.com/how-to-see-private-accounts-on-instagram-using-inspect/

https://techcult.com/how-to-access-private-instagram-inspect-element/

I don’t know anything about programming, and sadly I can’t differentiate between rubbish webpages and the real deal when it comes to stuff like that..

I also read about a couple of ios shortcuts that claim to be able to download private Instagram posts if you have the link to it.. is it true?

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Hey all,

I am looking into hacking TVs. Its well known they run linux most of the time, so we should be able to do some fun stuff with them.

I've found some guides, clips and other reference material online, but it isn't much. Do any of you guys have some reference material to help me on my learning journey?

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 10 months ago) by ChaoticNeutralCzech@feddit.de to c/hacking@lemmy.ml
 
 

cross-posted from: https://feddit.de/post/3322209

Insensitive joke
A building you would have liked to stand next to on September 11, 2001.

NewPipe-compatible link to the video / YT / Piped

Wikipedia

My tribute: YT / Piped

Hard-to-read scrolling text in my tribute video
On September 11, 2001, NYC was swept by the tragic collapse of two giant shopping malls conference centers while downtown Berlin was delighted to see a building come to life. The Blinkenlights, an array of 144 lightbulbs inside the Teacher's House on Alexanderplatz, made its debut on this fateful day. Chaos Computer Club, a German group of hackers and technology enthusiasts, had taken over the building prior to its planned reconstruction. Celebrating their 20th anniversary and amazing the public with their technical skills, the club installed floodlights behind the windows in the upper eight floors, lighting them up with animated content controlled over the network. People connected to the Internet would submit 20fps, 18x8 animations via email to take part in a pixel art contest, or have a love letter displayed at will. This is where this “BlinkenPaint” program came into play. GSM integration also enabled anyone to play a recreation of Pong, as well as remote debugging. The installation instantly became popular with music videos filmed in front of and inside it, and thousands of people came to the February 23 farewell party. The club released their hardware blueprints and source code to the public, enabling reconstructions of this project elsewhere.

In September 2002, the CCC created another installation, the “Blinkenlights Arcade”, to celebrate the “White Night” festival in Paris. The French National Library sprang to life with a 20x26 array of lightbulbs. Forgoing the abuse of relays in the original Blinkenlights, solid-state circuitry allowed 8 stages of grayscale, enhancing the look of GSM-controlled games such as Pong or Tetris, as well as music visualizations during the October 5 party. In 2008, the Toronto City Hall was lit with a 960-pixel, 16-step grayscale screen during this festival.

By the way, the title of the installation references a 1950s meme text hung in computer rooms worldwide, exclaiming to “turisten und nonteknischen lookenspeepers” that “das komputermaschine ist nicht für der gefingerpoken und mittengraben […] für gewerken bei dummkopfen” and encouraging them to “relaxen und watschen der blinkenlichten” instead. Someone will surely have posted the entire copypasta in the comments. Also look there for clarifications and corrections of any mistakes in this text.

Over the past 20 years, giant LED screens have become ubiquitous in cities, and the idea of a display this size does not seem as outlandish anymore. Nevertheless, most display advertisements round the clock, and having the public play games and submit love letters remains unique to Blinkenlights and the installation should be remembered to this day.

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I'm a big fan of Darknet Diaries and Smashing Security. I'm all the way caught up on them though so I'm wondering if there are any others out there I'm missing out on?

If this post gets a decent number of comments I'll create a list here of every podcast recommended.

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I have repeatedly fund security concerns when working on internal applications. Simple things like sql injection, hard coded credentials, and privileged containers being run as the standard. I brought these up with my team lead, but he says that since its in the dev environment, it does not matter. To me, that is the totally wrong attitude to have about security. We should teach our developers how to not make these mistakes and fix them as we find them. Should I go over his head to report it to other managing parties? I want to say more, but am being as vague as possible just in case. How do I go about reporting internal vulnerabilities in a responsible way that won't make everyone hate me? I honestly believed that people would be happy to hear about their problems from me rather than get exploited but it does not seem to be the culture here.