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Messages - frog

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2
Game Hacking, Modding & Discussing / Re: Game from your childhood
« on: October 26, 2015, 08:48:59 pm »
These are my most memorable(in chronological order):
- Super Mario 3(NES)
- Bubble Bobble(NES)
- Mortal Kombat 2(Genesis)
- Sonic the Hedgehog 2(Genesis)
- Goldeneye(N64)
- Perfect Dark(N64)
- Cool Boarders 2(PSX)
- GTA Series(PSX/PS2)
- Thrasher: Skate and Destroy(PSX)
- Kingpin: Life of Crime(PC)
- Half-Life(PC)
- Team Fortress Classic(PC)
- Counter Strike(PC)

3
Science / Re: CO2 explosion extinguish fire?
« on: October 24, 2015, 03:37:02 am »
As a point of reference, carbon dioxide is not flammable. It is used as a propellant for potassium carbonate, which is the fire retardant found in fire extinguishers.

As for the sound-based fire extinguisher, it's pushing oxygen away from the fire using lower frequency sound waves. Sound waves can and do interact with matter(liquid, gas, and solid) in other ways as well; see 'cymatics' or 'coral castle'. It is probable the ancients moved large stones with the application of resonant frequency. In modern times it's called 'the hutchison effect.'


4
Beginner's Corner / Re: Opinions on "BEST" WIRELESS CARD
« on: October 14, 2015, 07:07:59 am »
As a personal preference, anything with an Atheros chipset and a RP-SMA connector. Alpha makes nice usb adapters that are made with a few different chipsets, they have RP-SMA connectors and range from 700mw to 2000mw output. Add a yagi antenna and maybe an inline power amplifier for a versatile 802.11 setup.

http://store.rokland.com/products/alfa-awus036nh-usb-adapter-16-dbi-yagi-antenna-5m-lmr-200-extension-cable?utm_medium=cpc&utm_source=googlepla&variant=691016753

This is a nice setup all by itself. Costs around 60 bucks. I have ordered from this company before on once occasion without any problems.

5
General discussion / Re: Who upgraded to Windows 10?
« on: August 01, 2015, 03:31:16 pm »
I usually don't encourage using Windows, but I do like Windows 10. I encourage Linux usage because of it's versatility and pragmatism in design. I did the upgrade and for the sake of the argument most of the time was spent downloading. It took marginally longer than a Debian install once the image was downloaded.

Notable mentions:
New features for cmd.exe, better(quicker) application crash handling, and a retro-classic design for the desktop user interface.

6
Found it on the Webs / FBI Vault FOIA Archives
« on: July 22, 2015, 12:07:09 am »

7
Found it on the Webs / Re: Hacking Team hacked
« on: July 22, 2015, 12:05:18 am »
https://cryptome.org/
There's more documents of relevance on this site. Scroll down or use ctrl+f -> 'hacking team'

8
Beginner's Corner / Re: Cracking WPA2 handshakes
« on: July 16, 2015, 04:34:54 pm »
Lol fail. This thread was about alternatives to a bruteforce/dictionary attack

I didn't know this was a competition lol. More likely than not op did not use a gpu in his bruteforcing attempts.

9
Beginner's Corner / Re: Cracking WPA2 handshakes
« on: July 14, 2015, 10:19:16 am »
You can brute force the handshake if you have a decent video card. https://hashcat.net/wiki/doku.php?id=cracking_wpawpa2

10
Beginner's Corner / Re: Python is good for hacking or Ruby?
« on: July 12, 2015, 08:49:46 am »
Python over Ruby:
- easier to read
- bigger std lib
- more community libs
- used more ubiquitously
- installed by default on most unix-like systems
- more literature available that converges Python and hacking concepts specifically(i.e. grey hat python, black hat python, violent python)

Now I feel like we're beating a dead horse..

11
Found it on the Webs / Chris Roberts - By Land, By Sea, By Air
« on: May 22, 2015, 05:09:22 am »
Chris Roberts is the founder of One World Labs and is behind the plane hacking story that's been in recent circulation. I was able to find a presentation he did in 2012 regarding what would be considered 'exotic' targets for remote access and manipulation.

http://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/security-expert-says-he-hacked-into-aircraft-controls-through-entertainment-system-1.3078787

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H0F2J_Xh6MA&feature=youtu.be

12
Hardware / Re: calculating wpa speed (gpu)
« on: March 05, 2015, 10:47:59 pm »
WPA-PSK hashes are salted with the SSID so in theory cracking speed depends on the byte-length of the SSID. If the SSID is longer in character-length, that's more bytes that have to be processed during hash computation. Hashcat pre-computes the hashes on the fly so the longer the SSID, the longer hashcat will take during pre-computation before the hash-comparison sequence.

13
Hacking and Security / Re: Using google dns / open dns question
« on: March 04, 2015, 08:23:41 am »
I use proxychains and tor to maintain privacy. The only limitation is that proxychains only works with command line applications. However, proxychains will let you change the dns resolver settings so you can proxy your application traffic and your dns requests as well. My /usr/lib/proxychains3/proxyresolv has these DNS servers in it.

Code: [Select]
#DNS_SERVER=208.67.222.222 # openDNS
#DNS_SERVER=208.67.220.220 # openDNS(secondary)
#DNS_SERVER=209.244.0.3 # Level3
#DNS_SERVER=209.244.0.4 # Level3(secondary)
#DNS_SERVER=8.26.56.26 # Comodo Secure DNS
#DNS_SERVER=8.20.247.20 # Comodo Secure DNS(secondary)
#DNS_SERVER=37.235.1.174 # FreeDNS
#DNS_SERVER=37.235.1.177 # FreeDNS(secondary)

Proxychains can only use one dns server at a time. When it comes to network scanning(nmap version scans will crash proxychains every once and awhile with a SIGSEGV) I use the proxychains/tor setup as it allows me to interact with remote systems and maintain a private network identity.

If i'm using my web browser, I set firefox to use tor as a socks proxy. Firefox also has dns settings in about:config such as 'network.dns.disableprefetch=true' and 'network.proxy.remote_dns=true' which will force firefox to use your proxy for dns requests/responses. This works well and it's easy to set up. To change which dns server firefox uses, just modify your network interface's dns settings. Firefox will push the request through tor to the specified dns server.

14
General discussion / Re: What do you eat?
« on: January 15, 2015, 10:28:53 pm »
Being omnivore just tells the capability to digest certain food, it is a biological thing. It does not mean that you actually use that capability.
E,g, human meat-only eaters are no carnivores just because they have the same diet as carnivores.
What I observed: A lot of people who are no vegans or vegetarians have a less varied diet than vegans, because they are not aware of the possibilities or just out of habit. Eating meat and plants does not mean it is varied if you eat the same all the time.

I agree, but I still stand by my original argument. Since an omnivore has the capability to digest a wider spectrum of food this affects a higher potential of variance in a given diet intrinsically. I'm not saying that an herbivore's/carnivore's diet is not varied, only less varied.

15
General discussion / Re: What do you eat?
« on: January 12, 2015, 09:53:24 am »
I will argue that an herbivore or carnivore's diet is less varied than an omnivore's. Omnivore by definition implies variance.

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