Calling all #YubiKey users! Exciting news from @Microsoft today: public preview of smart card redirection support for YubiKeys in Windows App on iOS version 11.0.4 is now available! 👏
Check out their blog to learn more: https://t.co/DZp08Td5Vx
@SpoogemanGhost@three_cube Just using the RTL-SDR for passive listening is insane.
The HackOne with the TX is like super powers, best you start now with the RTLSDR and learn how to just RX.
You can still do GSM decryption and peak into live phone conversations.
@oz1lqo Mener det er et EU lovkrav mht til standselængde/reaktionstid som gør at fartpiloter især adaptive ikke må fungere under 40? Eller 30, måske det er 35 km/t.
Så en lov mæssig begrænsning ikke teknisk.
Learn how researchers have developed a method to identify long-haul cable links via traceroute data to better understand the vulnerability of the cable infrastructure that underpins the Internet
https://t.co/puujzR4pLO
@DaryllSwer @macarnellc Yeah but then I think Cogent is a bad example, and even finding a provider that exclusively owns all backbone links, imo is near impossible.
@DaryllSwer @macarnellc Ahh I understand, your point is when f.ex. some1 like Amazon rents contractors as delivery drivers, they don't actually deliver packages "end2end".
Regarding backbone, while the fiber, wavelength etc might be leased, the packet routing is still Macarne. Like Amazon deliveries.
@DaryllSwer @macarnellc My point is that almost no one owns all of their links, even in the backbone. Even T1s. MAYBE inside a country like USA they do, but that's not T1.
Leasing backbone links is common and can be useful, certainly quicker than establishing your own.
@DaryllSwer @macarnellc How do you know cogent owns all their long haul links? It's quite common that T1,2,3s etc doesn't. But no one is transparent about it for competitive reasons.
@vxunderground Y'all remember when SSH was globally dangerous?
Phew that was long ago, good thing we fixed security forever and never have to think about it again.