

My name isn’t Viola


My name isn’t Viola


So you’re telling me they’re exploiting buffer underflows?


Vibeageddon


Mine said gpu was hidden, Firefox mobile


I get a blank page?


works in bazzite which is fedora-based


Ok this is the first time I try one of these exploits and it works on my system, I’m currently very spooked.
On the other hand, this may allow me to root my LG WebOS TV?
My European city went from being bike-friendly before it was cool to being unfriendly and is now bouncing back a little, so…


Love how people in this post believe THE brake manufacturing company, single supplier for virtually all competition-level vehicles, not to mention billions of road vehicles, are a bunch of dumbasses who can’t design a different version of their MAIN PRODUCT.


I’ve done it. With the once-upon-a-time-cars it was just a metal wire connected to the drum brakes, you could easily modulate it.
The wheels look disproportionally small… Like a big bellied guy with small legs
Well, the article says we won’t, so no need to wonder


The Attack: How it works
Every time you open LinkedIn in a Chrome-based browser,
Stopped reading there
You recognize vendor lock is bad, and that’s why they’re complaining, you guys are arguing about nothing


Hold it, Gordo


GabeGoggle
ive used smart light bulbs in a botnet before
Yeah that’s why I never mentioned WiFi ones. Which can still be secured by not letting them access the rest of the network or the internet. That’s what we do in industrial automation, security standards for PLC software tend to suck, but that’s irrelevant if it can’t be reached.
and if you do a teardown on one of those locks you can probably get the firmware and uart to get the unlock function which you could use theoretically to unlock every single one
I don’t see how that’s relevant for a lock that’s inside an armoured door, it’s only accessible by disassembling the door, at which point unlocking it is moot.


No, not just the US
Life’s a buffer