>one more gay pride rainbow
It's a natural god-made real rainbow, not a gay pride flag.
You might be mentally ill.
>one more gay pride rainbow
It's a natural god-made real rainbow, not a gay pride flag.
You might be mentally ill.
this
He bakes like a mad man, and at some point we will cure him of his mental illness.
o7
"Jim Watkins forcefully removed all of the original /qresearch/ mods and set new ones in our place"
lmao, even lying in the end
>we forget to login for weeks
>board is up for grabs
>gets grabbed
>but muh that was forceful
>and benefit from it
BS
https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/israel-one-in-four-families-poverty-line
https://www.wired.com/story/saflok-hotel-lock-unsaflok-hack-technique/
https://archive.is/PypxP
Hackers Found a Way to Open Any of 3 Million Hotel Keycard Locks in Seconds
The company behind the Saflok-brand door locks is offering a fix, but it may take months or years to reach some hotels.
When thousands of security researchers descend on Las Vegas every August for what's come to be known as “hacker summer camp,” the back-to-back Black Hat and Defcon hacker conferences, it's a given that some of them will experiment with hacking the infrastructure of Vegas itself, the city's elaborate array of casino and hospitality technology. But at one private event in 2022, a select group of researchers were actually invited to hack a Vegas hotel room, competing in a suite crowded with their laptops and cans of Red Bull to find digital vulnerabilities in every one of the room's gadgets, from its TV to its bedside VoIP phone.
One team of hackers spent those days focused on the lock on the room's door, perhaps its most sensitive piece of technology of all. Now, more than a year and a half later, they're finally bringing to light the results of that work: a technique they discovered that would allow an intruder to open any of millions of hotel rooms worldwide in seconds, with just two taps.
Today, Ian Carroll, Lennert Wouters, and a team of other security researchers are revealing a hotel keycard hacking technique they call Unsaflok. The technique is a collection of security vulnerabilities that would allow a hacker to almost instantly open several models of Saflok-brand RFID-based keycard locks sold by the Swiss lock maker Dormakaba. The Saflok systems are installed on 3 million doors worldwide, inside 13,000 properties in 131 countries.
By exploiting weaknesses in both Dormakaba's encryption and the underlying RFID system Dormakaba uses, known as MIFARE Classic, Carroll and Wouters have demonstrated just how easily they can open a Saflok keycard lock. Their technique starts with obtaining any keycard from a target hotel—say, by booking a room there or grabbing a keycard out of a box of used ones—then reading a certain code from that card with a $300 RFID read-write device, and finally writing two keycards of their own. When they merely tap those two cards on a lock, the first rewrites a certain piece of the lock's data, and the second opens it.
“Two quick taps and we open the door,” says Wouters, a researcher in the Computer Security and Industrial Cryptography group at the KU Leuven University in Belgium. “And that works on every door in the hotel.”
plus you can also blame these too for doing rituals without thinking wtf they are doing.
Literally the same.
Everyone gets the brainwash treatment.
Everyone.
No exceptions.