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20:50
"i just downloaded something illegally, how can i be sure i won't get hacked" - security.stackexchange.com/questions/258571/…
I prefer the "i did something illegal, how can i keep the police from finding me" questions
haha
those are nice
The "somebody is trying to destroy my life by hacking every device i own" questions would be the funniest, but we get them too often
It's like I saw someone on MSDN asking how to bypass windows activation on his "got from kazaa" windows iso...
@FireQuacker and don't forget the "neighbor hacking my devices remotely before I even open the sealed package"
Hacking is magical, so why not
Maybe one of these days, it will turn out that the neighbor is actually part of the NSA and actually has been stalking people in his free time...
21:09
neighbor could be NSA and OP is not on the US, or OP is on the US and neighbor is from KGB...
Because of course the neighbor has nothing better to do than spy on you all day long.
21:23
Does someone know the name of the following attack: You could simply send a bunch of packages to a router/Wifi-point and it would get overflown and thus taken offline.
It were packages of a specific protocol but I forgot which protocol and what the name of the attack was.
It was a deauth attack
21:41
@nobody Sometimes manpower is not the issue, time is not the issue, and some people have all day long. If only we had logs for voyeur law enforcement. Call E_BORED_INFORMANT / E_BORED_NEIGHBORHOOD_WATCH` a determined attacker too?
22:18
@prosody-GabeVereableContext You're right about that, except it is a rare combination for someone to have all day long and access to exploits that can hack everything. There definitely are not enough of those people out there for us to get roughly a question a month about them.
22:40
@nobody "Rare"? Law is too quiet about Official Hacking Weapons. If society asks for better surveillance, when will law enforcement standardize/open that job? Before we know it, now we have superempowered officers, hacking with tools that they're barely aware of their actual function, now able to slow your internet connection with an easy button, like a gun trigger, but not showing blood spatter or fingerprints for tracing. What do we do when the tools come before the laws to enforce them?
22:56
@O'Niel Quack?
Also that's not how it works
@prosody-GabeVereableContext Most officers would not be the type of person to have the all day to waste on a neighbor. But even if they do, most police departments don't have zero-day powered hacking tools that they can just recklessly use. If they did, we'd be catching them more often. Sure, some police forces may have them, but not all, not even most.
IIRC - it floods the client with 'fake' deautentication packets to disconnect it
@JourneymanGeek Well, agreed, persay "hacking" is a fine line where zero-day exploits are accomplished by an ISP (Internet Service Provider) agreement that does the same "hack".
@prosody-GabeVereableContext more that @O'Niel might be incorrect LD
Also in this case I remember a hotel chain being in the naughty list cause they were doing that to encourage sales of their wifi :D
2014????
WHERE HAS THE TIME GONE?
Wow, Marriot was "hacking". Figures, it's free.
23:08
Its not a super secret thing
Its part of the wifi protocol :D
Human body is a weapon, so is your WIFI router.
uhm... what?
Shooting (packet stuffing), from a physics perspective. :P
Well, throwing (WIFI packets), for the human analogy.

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