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0x003
·5 ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
> though I found it a bit fishy why he couldn’t get another job

What line of work was he in? If he lost his job during the pandemic, is it possible there simply were very few jobs available that he was qualified for?
0x003
·5 ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
> HIGH Severity. This includes issues that are of a lower risk than critical, perhaps due to affecting less common configurations, or which are less likely to be exploitable. These issues will be kept private and will trigger a new release of all supported versions. We will attempt to keep the time these issues are private to a minimum; our aim would be no longer than a month where this is something under our control

So something to make sure you update, but not a Heartbleed level concern
0x003
·5 ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
It's not clear to me from the link, what is tusky? and why was it removed?
0x003
·5 ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
I think it was written in B as Ritchie extended B for the PDP-11. By that point the B compiler was written in B

https://sci-hub.do/10.1145/155360.155580
0x003
·5 ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
Not allowing one group to have an equal voice is the opposite of live and let live
0x003
·5 ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
RCE in SMW would be particularly impressive
0x003
·5 ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
Could you share the command?
0x003
·5 ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
I wish they had kept it, a little bit of fun doesn't hurt anyone nor detract from the project.
0x003
·5 ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
Some people are allergic to humor ;)
0x003
·5 ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
> George Bernard Shaw said, The power of accurate observation is commonly called cynicism by those who have not got it.

I think you should double check to make sure your "accurate observation" and "clear eyed" thinking is not tainted by your own biases. It's very easy to consider ones own view the accurate one without ironing out the biases learnt or inherent to you.

> Well that's imaginative but it seems highly unlikely. After all, if everyone is so highly primed to change in this way, and all it takes is one person to spark the fire... chances are enormously likely it would have happened already, and it would have happened without you needing to spark it.

They have. Millions of times in fact! Human history is always changing and growing from little things and big things too. The world of today looks drastically different to that of 30 years ago, or 90 years ago or 500 years ago!

> This idea that you're at the center of a movement to change the world is just more subconscious ego feeding. If you want to be at the center of a movement that changes the world... it's going to take a lot of hard work.

It's not about being the center of a movement to change the world, and the fact you keep jumping back to that shows that you don't understand what I'm saying. You look at it in that lens because you want to, but it's just about doing minor good things for it's own purpose. A simple autotelic action. It's honestly that simple, but the end result of a lot of people making that simple choice is a changed world. It's not about feeding ego at all. It's also not about building a movement, at least not directly. It's about convincing those around you of the value of doing something small that improves things even insignificantly because combined they have massive impact.

Enjoy your "clear-eyed view" of the world, I know you've convinced yourself you're 100% correct.
0x003
·5 ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
> The reality is that the reason we do these things is to make ourselves feel better. Ah, yes, my daily shot of endorphins from recycling. Ah yes, my bumper sticker makes sure everyone knows I'm one of the good ones -- my social standing is safe

Speak for yourself my friend. The idea that people only make changes, even little ones entirely out of self service is extraordinarily cynical and a very negative and sad view of the world.

Sometimes people just do good things, because they want to improve some minor aspect of our world, or make someone elses (or somethings) day a little bit nicer. Sometimes people do this entirely without the desire to praise themselves or be praised by someone else.

It still exists, but by it's nature you don't often see it. And if you don't believe it exists, even when you do catch a glimpse of it you wouldn't notice or care.

> I think it's all hollow. If you aren't making a real impact -- actually moving the needle -- you are doing nothing. It's just a vanity.

Say on my walk to and from work every day I pick up one single piece of litter and quietly put it in the bin. I do this every day, 5 days a week, 50 weeks a year. That's 500 pieces of litter. Every day those little actions aren't moving the needle at all, but at the end of the year I've actually managed to make a tiny little nudge to my environment around me. Say I tell my friend and they decide to do the same thing, now it's 1000 pieces of litter. They tell 2 of their friends, now it's 2000 pieces of litter. Then I decide to make it 2 pieces of litter, and I tell my friend and they pass it on. Now it's 4000 pieces. They start telling their friends. And so on and so on. The individual action barely nudges any needle, but just because you don't see it doesn't mean it isn't moving some needle even slightly. You just don't have strong enough vision.

> I believe in donating money to causes that have high impact. Given my skillset, I'm confident that's by far the best thing I can do. And aside from that, I don't sweat the small stuff. I have a keurig. Yep you heard right. Also donated enough to save a few lives from malaria. Exactly one of those facts about myself made any difference at all to the world.

You don't exist in a vacuum, and my whole point of all my comments is that individual action drives collective change. One person making minor adjustments on it's own is nothing, but if many of those singular people decide to make changes it can lead to amazing things. You can choose to make whatever change you please, I'm glad you believe in some action. But let me ask you, what change do you think you're making by stomping on the idea that multiple little changes can lead to positive effects? Why expend the energy if it's pointless anyway?

Things can be better, and people should try and make as many little positive changes as they can to the world. No person is smart enough, or has enough foresight or knowledge to be able to predict what that may lead to in the future, and personally I choose to be optimistic because why waste my life believing that anything better is a futile mission?
0x003
·5 ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
It's not about doing the best thing, it's about doing something. You don't have to perfectly efficient, just take simple actions that reflect the change you want to see. We all have limited time and energy, if you see something positive you can do you shouldn't dismiss the idea of doing it just because you could sell all your belongings and become an eco-warrior and be maximally efficient in pursuing a positive development. Don't do nothing because you could be doing more. Just do what you can.

Do something good and do it consistently.
0x003
·5 ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
One person doing something in the face of billions of others is the entire opposite of pointless. Giving up because you're one person and you can't magically transform the entire world is cynical, a cop-out and completely misunderstands the nature of the problem.

The world won't change overnight, it won't immediately flip from the actions of one individual, or two, or even 1 thousand or 1 million. But that doesn't mean the action is pointless.

Change requires momentum, momentum requires the actions of an individual diligently living the change they want to see and sharing it with others. That sort of change builds slowly, often imperceptibly. But before you know it things begin actually changing. So no, this binary attitude of "You can't change everything by your actions so you may as well do nothing" is such an apathetic, cynical cop-out and I hate seeing it spouted everytime you see someone do something positive. As an idea it literally does nothing but harm and it has no value in being said.
0x003
·5 ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
Crackmes are how I got into it. crackmes.one has a bunch of good ones. I whipped up a quick and easy one here for you you can run it if you want but it doesn't need to be run (generally don't run random executables you download off the internet) just load it in ghidra/radare/<decompiler of choice> and figure it out. it's just about finding the main entry point of the program and following the flow. https://filebin.net/h4kp7s0z04kqa5om
0x003
·5 ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
It's a cool idea and I like the execution but if I'm at the point where I've uploaded the binary over and executed it I've already run `sudo -l` and checked my permissions (and I could be wrong but from my brief scan of the source code I don't think it attempts to exploit SUID but just sudo permissions). Probably would save a little bit of time with docker escalation but again pretty standard enumeration would've revealed that vector by then.
0x003
·5 ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
I mean typically yes, I keep binaries around for whatever system I'm targeting. 32+64bit binaries for linux and windows (4 total) will cover about 99% of any machines you're likely to come across. I think you've taken more of an issue with this than is necessary, seeing as if I can run linpeas or linenum I am probably not going to have an issue running a static binary, and it's really a matter of personal choice.