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[–] 16204093? ago 

Commit suicide OP

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[–] 16204095? ago 

I will fucking hunt you down and your family and force you to sit for the rest of your natural life in a prison cell facing a TV feed of your shill posts motherfucker. CONTEMPLATE THAT YOU GODDAMN SWINE! I WILL NEVER SURRENDER I WILL NEVER TIRE NOR SLACKEN! NO PERSONAL PRICE CAN DISSUADE ME. NO FIAT CURRENCY BONANZA TAKE THE WIND OUT MY SAILS FOR MY DESTINATION IS EITHER DEATH OR FREEDOM FROM ZOG AND I WILL DO IT IN ANY CAPACITY. ANY FORM. IF I HAVE A WOUND I WILL SPRINT BACK TO THE FRONTLINE TWICE AS FAST. IF MY LEGS ARE MULCHED I WILL TRAIN MY ARMS AND HANDWALK MY WAY BACK THERE. I WILL DIG MY OWN TRENCHES AND CARRY MY OWN MACHINE GUNS. I WILL HAUL THE AMMO BOXES AND DRAW THE TACTICAL PLANS. NO TASK WILL PROVE TOO DAUNTING, NO STEP TOO LARGE.

NO HUMAN LIMIT WILL CONSTRAIN MY UNFETTERED WILL TO REMOVE YOUR EVIL EVIL EVVVIIIILLLLL FUCKING KIND FROM THE HAND WHICH DRIVES THE YOKE OF TYRANNY ON MY KIN. WHICH BANKRUPTS FARMERS.

So kindly FUCKING NECK YOURSELF YOU GODDAMNED AMOEBA, YOU MENTAL MIDGET, YOU WEAK FUCKING COWARD!

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[–] 16204174? ago 

God bless you

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[–] 16204097? ago 

OPSEC ruminations by An Anon With a Clue™

https://archive.fo/jv0qa

If every tree falling in every forest might soon be heard by an internet-connected microphone, what hope is there for our privacy?

Wwhen you’re sitting in a room with an iPhone (spy phones), an Apple Watch (spy watches) and a smart assistant like Amazon Echo or Google Home (spy applainces), you’re surrounded by a dozen microphones. (Newer iPhones have four and the Echo has seven, while the smartwatch has just one, for now.)

Add in the latest smart wireless headphones (bugphones) — Apple’s expected next-generation AirPods (spypods) or competing ones from Bose or Shure — along with talking microwave ovens (spy ovens) and TVs (spy TVs) from Samsung, LG and others, and anyone at home or in an open-plan office could soon be within earshot of hundreds of microphones.

The roadmaps of tech giants and startups alike show how sound is poised to become the first ubiquitous connection between users and the artificial-intelligence hive mind the internet is becoming.

Driving this change are massive volumes of components, originally designed for smartphones and other mobile devices. Cancer grows after all.

For a hundred years, microphones consisted of a relatively large membrane whose vibrations were converted to electrical impulses. But starting in the 1980s, engineers worked out ways to make microphones tiny, bordering on microscopic. Most still have a pocket of air trapped behind a vibrating element, but now they can be carved out of silicon, just like the microchips to which they’re attached. Smartphones, smart speakers and any other gadget that listens for your voice all use these kinds of microphones.

One ongoing challenge for microphones has been physics: The smaller microphones get, the more of them you need to capture a sound, and the more processing of that sound is required.

Startups such as Boston-based Vesper Technologies, Inc. — which has received money from Baidu, Bose and Amazon’s Alexa Fund — are meeting the challenge with even tinier, yet more capable designs built around minuscule flaps of silicon that generate electric current when bent by sound waves. Vesper claims this gives their microphone unique capabilities, like understanding your voice even in windy conditions, and drawing zero power when awaiting a “wake word,” since sound itself generates the power the microphone needs.

We’re moving toward a world in which everything with a plug or battery can respond to a voice command.

Apple’s next AirPods (spypods) could have many of the capabilities that Vesper claims its microphones will enable, such as built-in noise cancellation. (In the past, Apple has used several suppliers for its microphones.) Meanwhile, the CEO of Samsung’s consumer-electronics division recently told The Wall Street Journal that by 2020 his company plans to equip every single device it sells—from TVs to refrigerators—with microphones.

It could be unnerving to be surrounded by listening devices, but the paradox is that as the technology develops, so does our ability to free these gadgets from having to connect to the internet.

Consider the voice-controlled trash can (spy cans) from Simplehuman. Say “Open can” and it opens—and then closes on its own once the user walks away. That’s it.

It’s easy to make fun of a high-tech trash can, especially one that costs $200.

As anyone who lives with multiple virtual assistants can attest, it is tricky to talk to one without inadvertently involving the whole crowd.

Consumers must do everything to stop this from happening and BOYCOTT all these spy products.

Puke peice here: https://archive.fo/u2rcj

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[–] 16204098? ago 

11858043

Anon, you and I are on the exact same wavelength. We will win with flowers and science.

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[–] 16204100? ago 

helpful for newfigs

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[–] 16204146? ago 

This

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[–] 16204102? ago 

fuck whitey

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[–] 16204103? ago 

11861871

When you’re innocent and still keep having to deal with enrichment.

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[–] 16204105? ago 

/baph/ has a new BO but he acts buttblasted and may glow.he claims that he was a /baph/ BO before.anyone knows whats up?

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[–] 16204109? ago 

/baph/ hasn't been any good since the .pl version died. There were whole database dumps on there back in the day. It was like a candy store to a Hackeranon.

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[–] 16204110? ago 

2014 /baph/ was 2007 /b/ incarnate, those madmen were doxxing politicians and doing x10 worse to pedos than we're currently doing. Tis a shame benji got caught by feds ans turnt it into a honeypot, in February of 2015 2/3rds the active users suddenly disappeared, I wonder why?

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[–] 16204107? ago 

Infosec is a joke. You're only isolating yourself from potential allies and helping the Jew. Your computers are compromised at the hardware level, and have always been. Learn how to tango with the beast, or get the fuck off the ride!

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[–] 17675683? ago 

Your computers are compromised at the hardware level

I have heard of evidence of this. You probably need to be targeted or watering holed, though. The obvious target is the management engine in all x86 processors, Intel and AMD.

How to fix?

Run a pre-2009 CPU

Check out single board ARM computers without management engines

Buy new computer in store and never expose the same identity or use the same router

If an ME is compromised it has to be steganographically communicated with otherwise it's super obvious that something up if you have a non-owned router. I'm not an expert, but I think may be why the attack is less common.

When you read a lot of cybersecurity stuff it freaks you out. Like, why am I even posting on this board with all the potentially compromised shit that's out there?

This is advanced level stuff, guys. The primary solution is, if you're operational , COMPARTMENTALIZE. It doesn't matter as much if someone owns your wifi driver, your ME and everything else when they don't know who you are because you've never used that computer or that IP address in connection with your real world identity.

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[–] 17821455? ago 

Hard drives post 9/11 are all pozzed, finding a working one older than that is impossible unless you use floppy disc raids in which they're too small for any CIAnigger code to run on.

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