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13:01
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Hack a Day
To the casual observer this flower looks nice as its illuminated center fades in and out. But there’s hidden meaning to that light. Some of the blinks are longer than others; this flower is using Morse Code. [Renaud Schleck] wanted to try a few different things with his MSP430 microcontroller. He decided on an LED [...]
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21:32
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SecDocs
Authors:
Autumn Tyr-Salvia Fox Magrathea Tags:
social Event:
Chaos Communication Congress 23th (23C3) 2006 Abstract: Discordianism is somewhere between a joke and a religion, and at the same time manages to be something else entirely: social bricolage. This presentation will cover the roots of culture jamming in early art and theatrical movements, and then move through the history of prankster groups and on to Discordianism where the pranksters are prophets. If you're at the CCC, you probably have some idea of what Discordianism is about. This presentation will show the rich cultural web of influences on Discordianism and show where it seems to be heading in the future. For those not in the know, Discordianism is something between a joke and a religion. Founded by a couple of beatniks about fifty years ago, Discordianism venerates the ancient Greek goddess of chaos, Eris, and her Roman counterpart Discordia. Robert Anton Wilson popularized Discordianism with his Illuminatus! Trilogy and Schroedinger's Cat Trilogy. Culturally, Discordianism often winds up being the religion of the surrealists and reality hackers, poking fun at the solemnity of others as they seek to connect with the divine. Still, many people are devout esoteric Discordians (for all that seems to be a contradiction), and this presentation hopes to show some of Discordianism's influences and history. Before we're done, we'll take a look at where Discordianism is today, and where it seems to be headed in the future. It is important to start at the begining, so we'll look to the Surrealists and Dadaists to get an idea of some of Discordianism's earliest influences. Satire has always been a part of society, but the Surrealists and Dadaists took it to a new level by learning to live in satire and social commentary. Bricolage and pastiche define a sort of social collage-making, where diverse ideas are patched together to form something new and often critical of the original. Discordianism relates to many of the new illegal art movements by doing the same thing with religion. We'll cover billboard liberation, mashups, and other forms of illegal art as related movements. Prankster movements have had a sort of infinite loop of influence on Discordianism. We'll talk about prankster movements from the Situationists to the Cacophony Society and glamourbombing. Discordianism needs all of these influences to remain whole and healthy as our ideological parents die off and we ourselves must replace them. Discordian.com strives to create Discordianism as a rich subcultural untradition where everyone consults their pineal glands. We'll talk about the current state of Discordianism in the world, from events such as KallistiCon and the Free Spirit Gathering to online fora and meeting places for Discordians. These days, Discordianism is taking its influences from both art and the esoteric, moving into a quasi-magical paradigm where reality hacking can happen just as much with a couple of candles and incantations as it can with a computer.
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21:32
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SecDocs
Authors:
Autumn Tyr-Salvia Fox Magrathea Tags:
social Event:
Chaos Communication Congress 23th (23C3) 2006 Abstract: Discordianism is somewhere between a joke and a religion, and at the same time manages to be something else entirely: social bricolage. This presentation will cover the roots of culture jamming in early art and theatrical movements, and then move through the history of prankster groups and on to Discordianism where the pranksters are prophets. If you're at the CCC, you probably have some idea of what Discordianism is about. This presentation will show the rich cultural web of influences on Discordianism and show where it seems to be heading in the future. For those not in the know, Discordianism is something between a joke and a religion. Founded by a couple of beatniks about fifty years ago, Discordianism venerates the ancient Greek goddess of chaos, Eris, and her Roman counterpart Discordia. Robert Anton Wilson popularized Discordianism with his Illuminatus! Trilogy and Schroedinger's Cat Trilogy. Culturally, Discordianism often winds up being the religion of the surrealists and reality hackers, poking fun at the solemnity of others as they seek to connect with the divine. Still, many people are devout esoteric Discordians (for all that seems to be a contradiction), and this presentation hopes to show some of Discordianism's influences and history. Before we're done, we'll take a look at where Discordianism is today, and where it seems to be headed in the future. It is important to start at the begining, so we'll look to the Surrealists and Dadaists to get an idea of some of Discordianism's earliest influences. Satire has always been a part of society, but the Surrealists and Dadaists took it to a new level by learning to live in satire and social commentary. Bricolage and pastiche define a sort of social collage-making, where diverse ideas are patched together to form something new and often critical of the original. Discordianism relates to many of the new illegal art movements by doing the same thing with religion. We'll cover billboard liberation, mashups, and other forms of illegal art as related movements. Prankster movements have had a sort of infinite loop of influence on Discordianism. We'll talk about prankster movements from the Situationists to the Cacophony Society and glamourbombing. Discordianism needs all of these influences to remain whole and healthy as our ideological parents die off and we ourselves must replace them. Discordian.com strives to create Discordianism as a rich subcultural untradition where everyone consults their pineal glands. We'll talk about the current state of Discordianism in the world, from events such as KallistiCon and the Free Spirit Gathering to online fora and meeting places for Discordians. These days, Discordianism is taking its influences from both art and the esoteric, moving into a quasi-magical paradigm where reality hacking can happen just as much with a couple of candles and incantations as it can with a computer.
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7:01
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Hack a Day
If you want to find out what something is made out of, you’ll probably be using a spectrometer. These devices allow scientists to determine what something is made of by shining light through an object and recording what colors are absorbed. Professional spectrometers cost many thousands of dollars, but you can build your own using a [...]
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14:01
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Hack a Day
We’ve got something of a love affair going on with quadcopters, but there’s still room for a little something on the side. This fixed-wing drone can pull off some pretty amazing navigation. MIT’s Robust Robotics Group is showing off the work they’ve done with the plane, culminating in a death-defying flight through a parking garage [...]
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15:01
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Hack a Day
How can your love of hobby electronics and your participation in the Canadian National Kayaking Team be combined? Why not use your technical know-how to provide a performance edge? [Geoff Clarke] decided to rig up a paddle for data capture to see if they could learn anything. Here you can see that a series of [...]
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8:12
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Hack a Day
There’s something special about improvised weapons built for the upcoming zombie apocalypse. Whether it’s a Lousiville Decapitron or a shotgun revolver, we’re always fascinated by homemade weapons. Here’s a few that rolled into the tip line over the last few weeks: You call that a knife? [Joerg Sprave], a.k.a. that German guy on YouTube that has fun with slingshots, [...]
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8:01
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Hack a Day
After reading The Five Fists of Science, a retelling of ‘war of the currents’ between [Tesla] and [Edison], [Rob] knew he needed a Tesla gun, the sidearm of the story’s protagonist. Since nothing as stupidly awesome and dangerous as a portable Tesla coil has ever been made, [Rob] needed to make his own. [Rob] started his build [...]
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7:01
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Hack a Day
It happens to the best of designers, spending untold amounts of time designing a complex device just to find out that you missed a trace, or you couldn’t rout something to something else. As time marches on its becoming a bit less common to pop open a commercially produced device and see a little jumper [...]
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6:01
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Hack a Day
[LucidMovement] was looking for some crystal-based artwork and just couldn’t seem to find anything that fit the bill, so he decided to build something himself. The inspiration for his desk lamp came from something we’re all familiar with, a DNA double-helix. To grow the crystals he built a helix-shaped growing substrate out of nichrome and [...]
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15:59
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Hack a Day
[Erv] was putting his holiday shopping list together and decided that instead of buying his friends something from the store, he would give them something a bit more useful. A former Electrical Engineer by trade, [Erv] typically prefers PIC microcontrollers, but he says that Arduinos are just so convenient to use for prototyping that he [...]
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7:01
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Hack a Day
If you’re like [Richard], you’ve got a few really rare components lying around. Maybe it’s a very weird micro or a really tiny CRT, but eventually you’ve got to build something with these parts. When [Richard] decided to put some ITS1A neon display tubes to use, he fell back to the old standby – a [...]
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12:09
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Hack a Day
[Johan von Konow] wanted to make something special as a wedding gift to his wife. He decided a pair of interlocking miniature rings would be the perfect keepsake. He started his search for a way to mill the wooden rings from a solid piece of wood, and documented his journey for our enjoyment. This project [...]
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10:01
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Hack a Day
Legalities of doing something like this aside, this concept by [MadSci labs] gives some insight into how one would go about recording a 3D movie in 3D. Probably many of you have wondered if this could be done, but they took it one step further and actually made a device capable of doing just that. [...]
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16:01
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Hack a Day
While [Oryx] is down with social media like Facebook and Twitter, there are times when he wants to share things with people he is hanging out with in the real world. Sure, he could always email his friends links to the latest video of a cat doing something totally hilarious, but he wanted something a [...]
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10:50
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Hack a Day
An Arduino can handle running a small LED cube on its own, but if you’re planning on building something big, eventually you are going to run out of pins. For something like an 8x8x8 cube, odds are you will have to turn to shift registers to get the job done. While you could design a [...]
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13:01
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Hack a Day
Well, if we ever need something huge built on a RepRap, now we know who to call. [Jim] over at Grass Roots Engineering wrote in to share a large 3D print he just finished, which was extruded by an equally impressive home-built 3D printer. The part he built consists of a bunch of hollow green tubing [...]
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13:22
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Hack a Day
[Ko] wanted to add an extra monitor to his computer, but he wasn’t looking for something huge that would sit atop his desk – he desired something smaller, much smaller. His ChibiMo mini USB monitor is a neat little creation that lets you extend or mirror your Windows desktop onto a tiny 128×64 pixel LCD [...]
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14:46
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Hack a Day
Hackaday forum member [nes] was training for an endurance race, and rather than having someone verbally call out his lap times, he wanted something he could keep in-vehicle to help keep track of his performance. With the race budget running dry, he and his teammates needed something cheap, if not free, to get the job [...]
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15:01
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Hack a Day
Using our hands to manipulate game controllers is something most of us take for granted. However for quadriplegics, whose arms and legs are completely paralyzed, gaming becomes a nearly impossible task. One man has spent the last 30 years of his life trying to help quadriplegics once again “pick up” the controller and enjoy a [...]
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7:57
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Hack a Day
Here’s something we haven’t run across before. We’re familiar with proprietary battery shapes (we’re looking at you, digital camera manufacturers), or custom recharge connections (look of death directed toward cellphone manufacturers), but using electrical tricks to force AAA brand loyalty is a new one. It seems that’s exactly what is happening with [OiD's] wireless headphones [...]
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13:01
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Hack a Day
Nike Air Force 1 shoes are probably some of the most well-recognized sneakers around the world, aside from the always timeless Chuck Taylor All Stars. So when [Alex Nash] was asked to create some art using something ordinary with a goal of turning it into something special, he immediately grabbed a pair and got to [...]
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21:25
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SecDocs
Authors:
Daniel Grzelak Tags:
Java Event:
Ruxcon 2010 Abstract: We have recently been asked to perform a number of security assessments which use Java serialised objects to communicate information between client and server. This approach is quite common, particularly in applications which implement some form of thick(ish) client. However, whenever I see these things flying across my proxy I always get excited and think "there has to be something wrong here..." So is there something really wrong? What should we be concentrating on when trying to attack these applications?
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12:00
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Hack a Day
It’s totally excellent when a simple concept results in something inspiring and fun. [Rich Decibel]‘s Kequencer is a good example, starting off as many projects do: “I had an idea the other day and I couldn’t decide if it was good or not so I just built it to find out.” Be still our hackable [...]
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9:08
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remote-exploit & backtrack
I wanted to get feedback on this subject. I'm taking a class at school where we compromise a box via buffer overflow and then setup a backdoor.
One of the ways I thought of was to check rc.local for any scripts. If there was one, then I would include my backdoor in there with something like
while true; do nc -lp 6666 -e /bin/sh; done
Maybe even renaming nc as something else. But then it would be easily visible to administrators by using lsof -i or netstat -antp. So instead have the script connect to me once it gets run. But then what if the box gets rebooted only once a year. Plus lsof and netstat will still show the established connection. I wanted to see what you guys thought.
Where would you setup your backdoor and why?
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10:35
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Hack a Day
When you see $125 off something you probably assume it cost several times that to start with. Nope, this drastic discount leaves just $25 plus shipping. Use coupon-code: 2JLP-R4XRT3 when ordering the little rover. There’s a quick video snippet of it embedded after the break. What you’ll get is a Stellaris ARM Cortex-M3 microcontroller on [...]
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7:00
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Hack a Day
Halloween is rapidly approaching. This is just a reminder to you all to send in your Halloween hacks now so that we can all see them and steal your ideas get inspiration for our own projects. We’ve seen fantastic stuff in the past from motorized pumpkins to costumes that are simply awe-inspiring. Take a few [...]
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10:00
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Hack a Day
Can you beat this robot at pool? This sparks something of a “let the wookie win” attitude for us, but we still love to watch the video. This is the PR2 playing pool thanks to the folks over at the Willow Garage. It uses a laser sensor to detect the legs of the pool table, [...]
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3:52
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remote-exploit & backtrack
Hello,
So I recently have been messing around with Backtrack 4 Final (I've used previous versions before) on the LiveCD and I was fiddling with Airoscript. I ran into a problem where it seems something is wrong with the temporary files. I would run scan after putting my alfa into monitor on mon0, then I would click on the airodump-ng window and ctrl-c it. When I went back to the regular airoscript prompt and clicked on 2 (select target) , it said "ERROR: you have to scan for targets first." Something must be wrong with the temporary file listing the parsed networks? I am not sure how to fix this, so help would be appreciated. Thanks in advance!
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10:14
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remote-exploit & backtrack
Who in GAWD DAM Backtrack decided to come up with this bullsh!t...
I wanna run the new Firefox and fckn install the new pidgin...
-Sighs-
I'm tierd of this ./configure and make and make install...
Why can they just come up with something that acts like a EXE... and if there is please point it out.. and whats up with needing this then needing that...
apt-get install crap... -sighs-
Whos got the backtrack bible ? or something i need a manual to this forsaken program
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13:39
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Hack a Day
Here is something we didn’t expect (NSFW). The machinima crew behind RedVsBlue, Rooster Teeth, actually did a hack!
The idea is simple enough, how could you experience driving a vehicle like in a video game – aka, third-person. With some steel bar, Canon 5D camera, and a 15inch monitor inside of a blacked out cab, they [...]
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15:38
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remote-exploit & backtrack
I am using a laptop and it has a Broadcom network adapter.
When I open Kismet, it says something like "no networks detected".
What can I do to make it detect networks? There are plenty of networks, including mine in the area. If you need any more information, let me know. If you need information from a terminal, tell me what to type.
also, how would you connect to a wireless network? the program in the internet menu that says something like network manager does not open.
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11:30
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Hack a Day
This steam-powered tank is really something of a steam-electric hybrid. Steam provides the locomotion, but an electrical system provides the remote control and steering. A full boiler will provide 10-15 minutes of operation which you can see in the video after the break. Before you leave a nasty comment: Yes, we realize this project is [...]
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0:00
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remote-exploit & backtrack
Ok,.. So I got a pickle here and wanted to know if anyone ran into this,..
Went with verizon fios and they have there own routers cause I am amusing fiber optics? For giggles I tried to crack the new router at my house and it won't let me inject into it.. Works fine for my linksys one but for some reason there router seems to be a something new. There is something also new, you know it tells you the speed of the connection? like 54(Mps)? Well it says 54e.
Wait did some research,.. is this a case if mac address filtering? if so how do I adapt?
Also does that e mean that there is in fact mac address filtering going on?
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19:56
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remote-exploit & backtrack
Okay so i'm sending packets and i'm up to about 40,000
i have over 150 arp's but yet 0 acks?? is there something wrong or is this right?