You know what’s even crazier.
Yang dedahkan video Aktivis kemanusiaan “diseksa” bukannya media,
Tetapi Menteri terkeji itu sendiri.
Dengan bangga upload di social media.
Dah terbiasa menyeksa kerana tahu, “I am above the law & no one can touch me”
Judging based on the world’s response,
The tide is turning & more people are waking up the horrors of this brutal inhumane regime.
Siapa kata pejuang sumud tiada “taring”.
They’ve woken up the world to the atrocities which are taking place.
Jahat.
Kadang saya faham kenapa ada orang memang langsung tak letak kepercayaan dah pada 'muslim friendly', 'no pork no lard', bahkan yang dapag sijil halal JAKIM pun kena tempiasnya.
Sebab ada yang sampai pergi jauh siap tampal sticker halal untuk menipu orang Islam.
Jahat!
[HELP RT/MY🇲🇾GO] #pasarvtuber#pasaranimeMY
🪽 Nijisanji: Kanae 2nd Live Solitude Goods (thread)
💰price stated is 1st payment
📦 need 2nd payment
🎁 freebies provided
💌 DM to order
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Tak payah pergi. Biar event tu sendu. Ada banyak lagi aktiviti bermanfaat sekitar tu.
Acara Kota Buku.
Perhimpunan depan Sogo.
Flashmob Jodoh Lebaran.
Buku, demo, joget. Barulah betul-betul budaya Malaysia 😌
A both funny and educational meme. Let me explain:
In the first panel, Joey is excited because the hotel’s “free Wi-Fi” is extremely fast. Anyone who has stayed in hotels knows their Wi-Fi is usually slow, overloaded, and frustrating. So when a connection suddenly feels blazing fast, it feels like you got lucky.
In the second panel, Joey checks his device and notices his IP address starts with 172.16.42.x. His expression instantly changes to shock — because that number means something very specific in cybersecurity.
That IP range is the well-known default network configuration used by a device called a WiFi Pineapple.
A WiFi Pineapple is a portable penetration-testing tool that attackers can use to create rogue Wi-Fi access points. It can imitate legitimate networks … like a hotel’s Wi-Fi and trick nearby devices into connecting to it instead of the real network.
Once your device connects, the attacker effectively becomes the network in the middle, allowing them to observe or manipulate traffic passing through it. This is a classic Man in the Middle (MitM) attack.
The reason the connection feels “fast” is simple: you’re probably one of the few people connected to it, and the attacker is letting your traffic pass through so they can monitor it.
So if you ever connect to public Wi-Fi and notice an IP address like 172.16.42.x, there’s a good chance you’re not actually on the hotel’s network…. you might be connected to a rogue hotspot controlled by someone else.