Maybe we’re all aggressively agreeing with each other? Illegal surveillance is illegal. Censorship is unconstitutional. America 1st. Fight policies, not people.
Never forget there are terrorists worldwide who want us to lose faith in America. They want us to lose faith in democracy. In each other. To poison our view of the U.S. This is by design. Fight the insanity. Day by day. Narrative by narrative. Post by post. America = freedom.
@truthstreamnews Exactly. Wait until everyone knows about this mind-reading AI they’re using on everyone. Every thought. Every gesture. Every subconscious urge. Every movement. Every single thing you dreamt last night... Broadcast. Summarized. Shared. Happening now.
@WarClandestine I know the feeling well. You’re not alone. Never forget that you probably had an impact you’ll never see or know about. Unfortunately, unsung heroes are far more common than known heroes. Keep the faith. Keep on fighting. You are making a difference, even if there’s no applause.
Researchers just found a serious security hole in some older iPhones and Apple Watches that lets hackers take full control of the device. Bad news: Apple can’t fix it with a software update because it’s baked into the physical chip. The only real fix is buying a newer phone.
⚠️ New iPhone BootROM Vulnerability Exposes Apple SoCs to Full Chain-of-Trust Compromise
Source: https://t.co/orCWNloJJT
A novel BootROM vulnerability, dubbed usbliter8, affects Apple devices powered by A12, S4/S5, and A13 SoCs. The exploit chains a hardware-level bug in the Synopsys DWC2 USB controller with a firmware configuration flaw, enabling full application processor boot-chain compromise with no software patch possible due to the immutable nature of BootROM code.
The vulnerability originates in how the DWC2 USB controller handles consecutive USB Setup packets. The controller stores up to three Setup packets in memory before resetting the DMA base address (stored in the DOEPDMA register) to its starting position, functioning like a ring buffer.
#cybersecuritynews
@FBIDirectorKash Thank you for protecting our democracy. Cybersecurity is fundamental to our liberty. Without it, our democracy is a farce and no one’s vote truly matters.
@FreedomofPress How the hell do they expect citizens to protect themselves against threat actors without a VPN? If our cybersecurity were solid worldwide, that'd be another story/conversation. But you’re going to leave us unprotected for every hacker worldwide to stalk us and steal our identity?
PSA from the FBI about malicious traffic distribution systems:
> Don’t click on ads. Ever.
> Update your passwords; ideally don’t save them in your browser.
> Update your firewall settings.
> Use a VPN.
Today the FBI released a #PSA warning the public about cyber criminal use of traffic distribution systems (TDSs) to gain access to victim networks for ransomware or other financial scams. Cyber criminals use TDS to bypass traditional firewall rules that would otherwise block connections to malicious websites, and to analyze potential victims for targeting by collecting their IP address, operating system, location, device, and browser information. After driving users to a TDS, often through various social engineering techniques, cyber criminals can exploit users’ devices at the end of the TDS redirection chain by delivering phishing pages, financial scams, and other malware.
Learn more about how the scam works and review recommendations on how to protect yourself: https://t.co/JNYlUwbVPK
@PatriotLighthse@DailyMail She was correct. My biggest question for the people preparing to implement this (and testing it now) is what the fuck they actually expect people to do when they know their brains are read? Is there any human on the planet who legitimately would want to live like that?
Today, as part of Operation Endgame, the FBI joins our international law enforcement partners in announcing the disruption of SocGholish malware. SocGholish, active since 2018, is a Java-script based malware that masquerades as a legitimate browser update via compromised websites. The malware establishes an initial foothold into victim computers, collectively known as a botnet, and is then used by threat actors for further targeting with ransomware campaigns and espionage. As part of the operation, 106 servers and domains were taken down, 14,971 websites were remediated, the botnet was disabled, and victims were notified.
This action is part of Operation Riptide, an ongoing FBI campaign targeting the criminal actors, infrastructure, and financial networks behind cybercrime, cyber-enabled crime, and fraud against the American people.
Learn more: https://t.co/ob4ugpxmDG
@Starlink any idea what's going on with this non-local setup thing that happens on your Starlink app? I keep needing to click “set up local” to get mine to work properly…but why wouldn’t it be local in the first place? Is it automatically added to some mesh network otherwise?