Anonymous ID: ab1f20 Jan. 18, 2024, 8:32 p.m. No.20265745   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5766 >>5799 >>5800 >>5802 >>5898 >>6082 >>6194 >>6195 >>6196 >>6201 >>6204 >>6214 >>6215

https://twitter.com/GovNuclear/status/1748117747119116733

 

“To fuel today’s reactors as well as the growing fleet of tomorrow, the U.S. and its allies must secure their civil nuclear fuel supply that is free from Russian influence.”

 

– Katy Huff at today's

@GOPoversight

hearing.

5:58 PM · Jan 18, 2024

·6,736 Views

Anonymous ID: ab1f20 Jan. 18, 2024, 8:49 p.m. No.20265810   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5817

>>20265754

>this problem?

 

Anon, my nads are everything to me. Its basically all I got going.

 

Spend that fortune.

 

You might even meet a cute nurse. Spouse anon's friend is a dime. Was an ultrasound tech. Met her 5'7 350 lbs husband doin an ultrasound on him.

 

A fucking DIME (maybe a little like this pic).

 

Don't wait, seriously. Better to spend the money and be poor for a few weeks than risk some crzy sh*t.

Anonymous ID: ab1f20 Jan. 18, 2024, 9:25 p.m. No.20265907   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6082 >>6194 >>6195 >>6196 >>6201 >>6204 >>6214 >>6215

>>20265892

https://www.nbclosangeles.com/news/local/uc-irvine-students-hackers-cyberattack-discord/3315028/

 

 

UC Irvine students, grads fight back after hackers post gruesome images in cyberattack

 

Gory videos and images were posted on the social platform Discord in a cyberattack. A group of current and former UC Irvine students fought back.

 

By Hetty Chang • Published January 17, 2024 • Updated on January 17, 2024 at 7:45 pm

 

 

A group of current and former University of California, Irvine students managed to fight back a group of hackers after they were targeted in a vicious and gruesome cyberattack, according to one graduate involved.

 

The attack, which began on Jan. 9, included disturbing images and videos of human and animal mutilation.

 

''"The videos included human corpses being sexually violated," ''said Alina Kim, a UCI computer science and engineering graduate.

 

''She also saw people hurting animals, kids and other images she can never un-see. ''Some students got physically ill, Kim said.

 

"I remember feeling a lot of shock," she said. "Feeling just a very primal disgust and wrongness seeing this type of content."

 

The content was viewed by approximately 3,000 online users on the social platform Discord.

 

UC Irvine sent a statement saying in part: "UC Irvine does not manage the Discord servers, the account activity, nor the security settings around them – they are independently managed. However, we take seriously our commitment to protecting members of our community."

 

In one message, the hackers demanded a $1,000 ransom.

 

"For a long time, I feared something like this might happen, so I set up some infrastructure just in case," said Kim.

 

Kim put her computer science and software engineering degrees to good use as she teamed together with other users to stop the hack.

 

"If we banned an account in one server, it would ban them universally on all of our servers," said Kim. "That way we could keep each other safe, even if we weren't personally online to manage the attacks."

 

While the hack hasn't stopped, Kim and a team of others managed to block the content on the larger servers.

 

She is working with UCI police and planned on reaching out to the FBI. UC Irvine officials said counseling services would be available to students.

 

Kim is sending her own message to the perpetrators.

 

"I guess our message is: You chose the wrong school to mess with."