
Robinhood Breached! Here's What You Need To Know - Surveillance Report 63 - Techlore
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Date: 2022-04-15
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Comments and reviews: 9
Seegal
Quite the dystopian episode this week - especially for EU citizens, with that digital ID (-voluntarily- will soon turn into -quasi mandatory-, because all the alternatives will not be easily accessible and by orders of magnitude less convenient. But then, there's that new radio device thing which prohibits us from having phones with custom-ROMs anyways, so I guess we'll just get mandatorily spied upon all the time. It's time to get one official phone which is always carried around, but also always turned off and in an RF-blocking pouch and which contains all the crap they require us to be spied upon.
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Quite the dystopian episode this week - especially for EU citizens, with that digital ID (-voluntarily- will soon turn into -quasi mandatory-, because all the alternatives will not be easily accessible and by orders of magnitude less convenient. But then, there's that new radio device thing which prohibits us from having phones with custom-ROMs anyways, so I guess we'll just get mandatorily spied upon all the time. It's time to get one official phone which is always carried around, but also always turned off and in an RF-blocking pouch and which contains all the crap they require us to be spied upon.
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Sodium
-realism people- Look I can understand not wanting to jump to conclusions without evidence, but it is disappointing that you guys dismiss a possibility as nothing more than a conspiracy theory as in -Oh that can't happen-. You've shown in every SR the lengths companies and governments will go to obtain what they want, many of those methods which seemed impossible not long ago yet are real today. It's fine if you guys don't want to -go down that rabbit hole-, but at least acknowledge that some of these things, even the EU backdoor theory, is still plausible.
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-realism people- Look I can understand not wanting to jump to conclusions without evidence, but it is disappointing that you guys dismiss a possibility as nothing more than a conspiracy theory as in -Oh that can't happen-. You've shown in every SR the lengths companies and governments will go to obtain what they want, many of those methods which seemed impossible not long ago yet are real today. It's fine if you guys don't want to -go down that rabbit hole-, but at least acknowledge that some of these things, even the EU backdoor theory, is still plausible.
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Justin
19: 15
It's more likely that is just what they want us to think.
All of the countries are on board with the global control structure.
It's not an accident that all the world's -leaders- are preaching about build back better, the Great Reset, the 4th industrial revolution and the restructuring of every aspect of our lives.
They want us scared of the internet, so they can justify whatever authoritarian measures they want to implement.
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19: 15
It's more likely that is just what they want us to think.
All of the countries are on board with the global control structure.
It's not an accident that all the world's -leaders- are preaching about build back better, the Great Reset, the 4th industrial revolution and the restructuring of every aspect of our lives.
They want us scared of the internet, so they can justify whatever authoritarian measures they want to implement.
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Noah
The invisible JavaScript backdoor is more akin to an invisible fork in the road. It's there, and you can see perhaps what's at the start and end, you just don't realize the road connecting the points exists. So like, you'd still be able to see the code that's stealing all your data, you just wouldn't be able to easily see the path that eventually executes it, so you may think that that code never runs, when it actually does.
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The invisible JavaScript backdoor is more akin to an invisible fork in the road. It's there, and you can see perhaps what's at the start and end, you just don't realize the road connecting the points exists. So like, you'd still be able to see the code that's stealing all your data, you just wouldn't be able to easily see the path that eventually executes it, so you may think that that code never runs, when it actually does.
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Robert
14: 52 This -javascript- issue applies to lots of languages it does not show that javascript is crap. Personally I'm disappointed that this is considered a -security- issue it's more of an issue with somebody using the wrong tool for the job. That is they're using a text editor that doesn't clearly show the code they're looking at so the language has to work around their incompentance.
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14: 52 This -javascript- issue applies to lots of languages it does not show that javascript is crap. Personally I'm disappointed that this is considered a -security- issue it's more of an issue with somebody using the wrong tool for the job. That is they're using a text editor that doesn't clearly show the code they're looking at so the language has to work around their incompentance.
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TimBo
You should be able to sue somebody that breaks into your house whether you suffer material harm or not, but the purpose of the law is to not have your neighbors be able to sue the burglar, or anyone in town that discovers your house was burgled, thereby limiting the number of lawsuits that the courts have to deal with.
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You should be able to sue somebody that breaks into your house whether you suffer material harm or not, but the purpose of the law is to not have your neighbors be able to sue the burglar, or anyone in town that discovers your house was burgled, thereby limiting the number of lawsuits that the courts have to deal with.
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linlgnelaiernlk
Balaur means -dragon- in Romanian. It's actually not pronounced -buh-lore- as in -velour- as you said it. It's -bah-lah-oor-, as in -bada-boom-, and you roll the R like in Spanish. You can hear it pronounced in a translation app like Google Translate.
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Balaur means -dragon- in Romanian. It's actually not pronounced -buh-lore- as in -velour- as you said it. It's -bah-lah-oor-, as in -bada-boom-, and you roll the R like in Spanish. You can hear it pronounced in a translation app like Google Translate.
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Gypsy
-22: 35 More of _our money_ going overseas while the FJB administration tries to raise our taxes (and prices on everything else while making us more and more dependent on foreign energy) and track people who move more than $600 through a bank account. -
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-22: 35 More of _our money_ going overseas while the FJB administration tries to raise our taxes (and prices on everything else while making us more and more dependent on foreign energy) and track people who move more than $600 through a bank account. -
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Samantha
Intelligence agencies have some of the most potent hacking tools and cyber warfare by governments is very real and common. Much more common and widespread than private hackery although it sometimes disguises itself as that.
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Intelligence agencies have some of the most potent hacking tools and cyber warfare by governments is very real and common. Much more common and widespread than private hackery although it sometimes disguises itself as that.
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