Breaking eBPF Security: How Kernel Rootkits Blind Observability Tools
TLDR:- Deep technical analysis of eBPF-based security solutions through kernel-level hooks targeting BPF iterators, ringbuffers, and perf events
Link:- https://t.co/KgjlGRPn9P
Blog by @MatheuzSecurity
Usually i do not write these kind of things but recently i have seen @ICICIBank putting arbitrary charges without justification. I have decided to withdraw from them all my banking. Just for everyone to consider. #Cheating#ArbitraryCharges#Banking#ICICI@RBI@FinMinIndia
Anthropic leaked 512,000 lines of Claude Code source code yesterday.
What happened in the next 12 hours is absolutely wild.
4 AM. Anthropic pushes an update to npm. Inside the package: their entire codebase. A 60 MB debugging file accidentally bundled in.
23 minutes later, researcher Chaofan Shou spots it. Downloads the zip.
Posts it on X. Within 6 hours: 3 million views.
By the time Anthropic’s team woke up, the code was forked 41,000+ times across GitHub. Anthropic started firing DMCA takedowns. Too late.
A Korean developer named Sigrid Jin woke up to his phone exploding. He’s Claude Code’s biggest power user.
WSJ reported he burned through 25 billion tokens last year.
He read the leaked code.
Rewrote the entire thing in Python in 8 hours. His repo hit 30,000 stars faster than any GitHub project in history.
Then he rewrote it again in Rust. That version now has 49,000 stars.
Someone mirrored it to a decentralized platform with one message: “will never be taken down.” The code is permanent. Anthropic cannot get it back.
Here’s the part I can’t stop thinking about: Anthropic built something called “Undercover Mode.” Its only job: prevent Claude from accidentally leaking internal secrets.
They shipped an entire anti-leak system in their own product. Then leaked their own source code in a .map file. Irony is beautiful
NetExec now extracts even more secrets from the NTDS.dit🚀
With the new --history and --kerberos-keys flags, NetExec will also dump the password history and the AES/DES keys for Kerberos auth from the NTDS.dit🔑
Implemented by @kriyosthearcane, azoxlpf and me.
One Tejas crash.
One pilot gone.
And suddenly…
X is On Fire..
LinkedIn on Fire.
I saw the videos.
I saw the fake outrage.
I saw people milking tragedy for Trending.
Circulating crash clips like gossip.
Dropping “RIP” posts like Instagram filters.
Where was this energy for 50 years?
Where was the concern when 400+ MiGs fell?
Where was the outrage when 170+ pilots died?
Where were the hashtags when families shattered?
Silence.
Complete silence.
Because those jets were imported.
Those crashes were “normal.”
But the moment one Made-in-India jet goes down?
Suddenly everyone wakes up.
Suddenly everyone has an opinion.
Suddenly Tejas becomes a punching bag.
Suddenly Indian scientists become a joke.
Suddenly Indian engineers become memes.
Suddenly everyone becomes an expert on G-forces.
The hypocrisy is not subtle.
It screams.
I didn’t react for 24 hours.
I didn’t post condolences.
I didn’t amplify the crash videos.
Because the pilot deserves dignity.
But then… I saw the pattern.
Influencers pushing negativity.
Politicians jumping in for mileage.
Foreign lobby bots pushing,
“India can’t build jets.”
“Tejas is unreliable.”
So I dug into the data.
And it was hiding in plain sight.
Here is the total loss count for each fighter jet.
Ranked from highest to lowest.
F-16: 674 losses
MiG-21: 600 losses
MiG-29: 300 losses
F-35: 29 losses
Su-35S: 10 losses
Gripen: 9 losses
Rafale: 8 losses
Eurofighter: 8 losses
F-22: 6 losses
Su-57: 3 losses
Tejas: 2 losses
Now the average losses per year since service began.
This is where the truth hits hard.
F-16: 14.3 per year
MiG-21: 9.1 per year
MiG-29: 7.1 per year
F-35: 2.9 per year
Su-35S: 0.9 per year
Su-57: 0.6 per year
Typhoon: 0.36 per year
Rafale: 0.33 per year
Gripen: 0.31 per year
F-22: 0.3 per year
Tejas: 0.22 per year
Tejas is statistically one of the safest jets ever built.
Not just in India.
Globally.
And yet, this is the jet people mock.
So what they really want?
They want outrage against Bharat.
They want to shout “India can’t build.”
They want to feed their colonial inferiority.
They want to attack anything proudly Indian.
A jet crash is tragic.
Always.
But it is normal in aviation.
Every nation loses jets.
Every air force accepts risk.
Every aircraft has failures.
An inquiry committee will investigate.
They will give the facts.
Until then, we should stop humiliating our own country.
Tejas is a miracle.
A generational leap.
A symbol of India standing on its own feet.
A machine built by Indian brilliance.
Very soon we will have our own engine too.
And if the empire loyal crowd can’t digest that?
We don’t care.
Stop mocking our engineers.
Stop sharing crash porn.
Stop pretending to care.
Stop cheering for failures of Indian innovation.
Because here is the truth.
Tejas didn’t crash Bharat.
Bharat crashed the colonial mindset.
And some people just can’t handle it.
Jai Hind 🇮🇳
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