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marcusfrex

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Principles of Proactive Cybersecurity

youtube.com
1 points·by marcusfrex·10 mesi fa·0 comments

Enshittification of Cybersecurity

youtube.com
7 points·by marcusfrex·10 mesi fa·1 comments

Switchborn – 007 – The Endgame You Forgot [video]

youtube.com
3 points·by marcusfrex·10 mesi fa·1 comments

I hacked 4 banks at the same time [video]

youtube.com
1 points·by marcusfrex·11 mesi fa·1 comments

Switchborn: Cryptocoins 101 [video]

youtube.com
1 points·by marcusfrex·11 mesi fa·0 comments

Switchborn

switchborn.com
1 points·by marcusfrex·11 mesi fa·1 comments

Show HN: Forced to Give Your Password?

veilith.com
3 points·by marcusfrex·12 mesi fa·6 comments

Forced to Unlock? Veilith Shields Your Secrets

veilith.com
2 points·by marcusfrex·12 mesi fa·1 comments

comments

marcusfrex
·7 mesi fa·discuss
SQL is not a programming language.
marcusfrex
·10 mesi fa·discuss
Switchborn, the raw cyberpunk odyssey from Marcus Frex, skewers the "enshittification" of cybersecurity, a hollow race to cheap illusions where automated scanners and AI hype peddle pretty PDFs over genuine protection, as exposed by blunders like the 2017 Equifax breach. Marcus champions unbuyable artistry, human curiosity, and integrity amid corporate checklists, urging listeners to demand real fortresses over flattering facades in a digital world where true security whispers from the shadows of consequence. A rallying cry for discerning defenders, ethical innovators, and rebels against the commodified void.
marcusfrex
·10 mesi fa·discuss
Switchborn, the enigmatic podcast from Marcus Frex, unravels the double-edged sword of cyberwarfare through the lens of Stuxnet, a once-secret U.S.-Israeli digital strike that crippled Iran's nuclear ambitions but ignited a global arms race when it escaped containment.

Marcus dissects how tactical triumphs unravel into strategic blunders without endgame foresight, blending historical intrigue, ethical contradictions, and whispers from the digital shadows where Switchborn lurks as a harbinger of unforeseen consequences. A must for cyber strategists, policy skeptics, and explorers of tech's chaotic undercurrents.
marcusfrex
·11 mesi fa·discuss
This episode explores a 2014 Istanbul hack where Marcus exploited a careless developer’s sloppy code to breach bank systems, revealing the chaos beneath corporate illusions of "bought" security. Blending sharp critiques of complacent coders with poetic musings on Switchborn as a prophetic force, it’s a call to tech rebels and dreamers to embrace the artistry and anarchy of true hacking.

https://www.switchborn.com
marcusfrex
·11 mesi fa·discuss
NodeJS was/is/and always will be satanism anyway.
marcusfrex
·11 mesi fa·discuss
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a0uZDwPSB7o
marcusfrex
·11 mesi fa·discuss
Switchborn is a captivating weekly podcast hosted by Harun Esur (aka Marcus Frex), a cybersecurity expert and underground persona who emerged from decades of anonymity to share his unfiltered memories.

Blending cyberpunk introspection, rebellious wisdom, and raw storytelling, Switchborn invites listeners to explore the hacker ethos: walk to the edge of the post-quantum desert, follow the star, and let the challenges forge you or not.

Perfect for thinkers, and rebels seeking depth beyond the screen. Tune in for Marcus's evolving tales of control, chaos, and digital freedom.
marcusfrex
·12 mesi fa·discuss
It got old and you are missing the whole point.

If someone will think exactly like your mindset, he will likely damage potential evidence, opportunities, and the case right from the start and loosing the whole position if it is the Veilith. This is highly sensitive technology—there's no room for jokes.
marcusfrex
·12 mesi fa·discuss
All details are in the web page but if you want to get into technical details here I leave the link to the whitepaper;

https://veilith.com/Veilith-WhitePaper-v0.1.pdf
marcusfrex
·12 mesi fa·discuss
Imagine a briefcase where different keys open different compartments. One key might show your grocery list, another shows your real important documents. If someone forces you to open it, you can give them a "fake" key that shows harmless stuff.

This is called "deniable encryption" - you can honestly say "there's nothing important here" when using the decoy password.

And it is impossible to understand whether any one of the compartment is a random content or an encrypted one.
marcusfrex
·12 mesi fa·discuss
Imagine a scenario where you're coerced—whether through threats, torture, or even legal pressure—to reveal the password to your secure vault. In countries like the US, UK, and Australia, refusing to provide passwords to law enforcement can result months in prison in certain cases.

Veilith addresses this critical vulnerability with perfect deniable encryption. It supports multiple passwords, each unlocking distinct blocks of encrypted data that are indistinguishable from random noise—even to experts.

In high-stakes situations, simply provide a decoy password and plausibly deny the existence of anything more. Dive deeper by reading the whitepaper, exploring the open-source code, or asking me any questions you may have. Let's secure your data like never before!