astronaut_sloth

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 4 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

In short, yes, sort of.

However, I don't want it come off that Signal is bad by any means. It's the right choice for most people. I use Signal, and I really like it, in fact, but I know it's limitations. I'm not as familiar with SimpleX, but after a quick look at their GitHub, it does have extra privacy over Signal. The kicker is that it looks like an open network (if I misunderstood something in the code, please someone correct me) that anyone can join. While that's great for accessibility, it opens up attack surface. Even still, that will work for most people.

The key issue in this story is that the cabinet was using an open network with known vulnerabilities. They should have been using secure government comms. Is the encryption any better than Signal? Probably not (like I said above, NSA itself designed a bunch of our encryption algorithms). But it's a closed network where only authorized users can be on it.

In the end, for most uses Signal is good, SimpleX is a bit better. Matrix can also be good if proper precautions are used in accessing it. The government, though, shouldn't be using these open networks for classified communications; it's really poor OPSEC for them. Also, a resistance group is not the government, so operating more clandestinely on more common messaging platforms is a good choice. When a resistance group may want to rethink that communications strategy is when they get large, powerful, and organized enough to operate more or less in the open with impunity. If a resistance group can be a de facto government, then it may be time to migrate to a closed network that is fully under your control. Most groups never get to that point, though.

ETA: Choosing a communications system can seem tough, but it's really just a matter of knowing the capabilities and limitations of the tool. You'd think the government would be better at that.

[–] [email protected] 26 points 4 days ago (1 children)

Bester is by far one of the best characters in sci-fi, and some of Walter Koenig's best work.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 4 days ago (3 children)

https://thehackernews.com/2025/02/hackers-exploit-signals-linked-devices.html And this is just the latest. I'd imagine there's information that is closer held about other vulnerabilities.

It's really not as secure as one would want for government communications. It's good enough for activists because for most, there is security through obscurity. Governments, though, are targeted and known quantities with very public facing people. An adversary can pop an official's phone with relative ease. An activist, though, is generally mostly anonymous, so if the government wants to go after that individual, they have to find them first, which is harder.

And that's just looking at message content. Even without the content, metadata is insanely valuable. You can infer a lot just from who is in a chat and the frequency of messages. Just seeing that cabinet officials were in a chat that started getting that much activity would put any adversary on guard.

All that is to say that while Signal's encryption is good (hell a ton of modern encryption algorithms came from NSA itself), the app itself is not good enough for a government. If an activist group gets enough power, it would be prudent for them to move to a different, more secure platform if they're worried about the full weight of the nation-state coming down on them. That is to say, a police department doesn't have the resources to do anything meaningful with even just metadata, but the FBI is a whole different story.

TL;DR: Signal is good, but not great, and it is certainly not up to the task of protecting actual government communications.

[–] [email protected] 10 points 5 days ago

I get the sentiment, but depending on the particular activity, not breaking the law is an advantage. A peaceful protest in front of a government building following all laws makes it harder to justify breaking up, especially breaking up violently. It's a PR game just as much as it's a social action game. To be clear, though, this doesn't cover every instance, but there are times where following the rules to the letter is beneficial...just not always.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 6 days ago

It's strange. Then again, the actual Nazis kept meticulous records. These images and videos will be played for generations alongside the images and videos of other atrocities throughout history.

[–] [email protected] 14 points 1 week ago

As an Illinoisan, Pritzker is the exception that proves the rule. He uses his money for good, and has been amazing for the state. He really shows that billionaires can do good but the vast majority choose not to.

So, with that said, I'm all for letting him lead with AOC and Bernie. He can really bankroll efforts.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Oh I saw it. That's what I was going for in the "vintage vibe": back when people got medals for making Nazis afraid for their lives.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 week ago

I have some experience coding (I study AI and have a Computer Science background). Here are some general recommendations from my perspective that you are more than welcome to disagree with.

  1. Know your goal. Each programming language is a tool, and each has its strengths and weaknesses. Get familiar with what those strengths and weaknesses are before starting a project in a language. You might shoot yourself in the foot prematurely by picking a language less suitable for the task.

  2. Use what you're comfortable with. There are nerd fights all the time about different languages. Don't just choose a language because it's popular or niche. Sometimes you want to use a lesser known language. Other times a "normie" language is perfectly acceptable.

  3. The computer is dumb. It will do exactly what you tell it to do. The most common errors I've made are where the computer did what I told it to do but not what I wanted it to do.

  4. In the case of cyber security, technical hacks are harder to accomplish than something like social engineering. If you're a beginner, trying to find a zero day is going to be nigh impossible. Keep achievable goals.

  5. If you haven't programmed before and you don't know what language to start with, I'd recommend C, especially if you really want to learn. The language itself is simple (but semi-difficult) and runs fast. You'll learn the real fundamentals and build good habits. From there, I'd jump to C++ and C# or Java. Then learn Python and Rust.

  6. If you're not super keen on learning programming in general and just want to write things to automate "boring stuff" or bots, in other words "little projects," learn Python. It's probably the easiest to learn, and you can start making usable scripts very fast. Python runs slower than other languages, and it's not guaranteed to run everywhere based on versions or just not having it installed. In general, it's a great place to start if where you want to end is simple automation for yourself.

Those are really just my opinions; plenty of people disagree with me on what your first language should be. Feel free to reach out if you have questions or need help in learning.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 week ago (3 children)

I love the "We'll beat 'em again" one. That has a great vintage vibe.

[–] [email protected] 25 points 1 week ago

No, you see, that's illegal discrimination, but if someone says "No N*****" or "No Arabs," well, that's just free speech and perfectly fine for good, upstanding ~~white~~ American citizens to do. (very heavy /S if it's not abundantly clear)

[–] [email protected] 46 points 1 week ago (1 children)

How stupid does he think we are?

Before or after destroying the Department of Education? The entire reason behind this is that uneducated people don't know their rights or how the government works, so the GOP can run roughshod over our rights.

[–] [email protected] 59 points 1 week ago (4 children)

Because he conceded that it's not within his power to dismantle a government department that was made via a law. In other words, he blinked on infringing on that core Article I power. That said, I don't think it's a huge win, and he will try again. But at least we are finding the frontiers of Republicans' stomach for authoritarian behavior. It's not great, but it's something.

 
 

Bezos' Washington Post refuses to run this ad and get paid over $100,000 for it. Let's run it ourselves! There are two pages. We can print them and post them up around our towns and cities. It would be great to post it on federal buildings, and if you are or know a federal worker, have them print it, too and distribute them.

With enough, it can have at least a small psychological effect on Musk and his followers.

Here's a link to the actual PDF

 

For those serious about organizing and sharing important sensitive information, e.g. you're a government whistleblower, you're sharing information with free press outlets, etc., it's important to communicate securely. The best (and probably easiest) way is to use a live bootable OS that leaves no trace. TailsOS can be written to a USB flash drive and run on any computer after rebooting. I linked to a get started guide.

I hope this helps! Every little bit helps!

 

Long text post incoming!

Any popular resistance movement dies in the cradle if people feel isolated. Isolation breeds inaction. Therefore, to make people feel less isolated, word needs to go out to the general public to build solidarity and make them feel part of a greater whole. Resistors are not alone! It also has the psychological benefit of making oppressors feel surrounded (and rightfully so).

Therefore, to get those who want to resist motivated, we must advertise our cause. Thankfully, we live in a modern age where designing good looking graphics and printing them has never been easier.

The best information campaign will rely on guerilla tactics. Put posters up in heavy traffic areas outside, at work, in your neighborhood, on public bulletin boards, wherever needed to get the message out. One priority place would be inside government offices. There are plenty of federal workers who are resisting. If they put up even a few, we can psychologically terrorize the fascists, and this will force them to focus inward and divert from the rest of society.

Of course, these will be damaged or destroyed, whether intentionally or not, so we must be ready to replace posters as that happens, especially if it's ripped down.

Design: This, I think, is paramount. To attract those who may not like the current actions but are hesitant to really resist, it is important to use American symbology. Don't let the fascists take our flag, our symbols, our iconography. These things bind us together as Americans, and it can have an inspiring effect. We are all part of the greater whole.

Also highly important, make sure the designs are good. Marketers, graphic designers: that's your cue. If your an amateur, get the opinion of a trusted friend on a design.

If you don't have the time or ability to design, just take one off the internet. Therefore, I propose that we make repository of resistance posters on the web. Domains are cheap. VPSes are, too. It can also serve as a virtual poster.

I'd love to hear your thoughts. If you have some designs, post 'em, print 'em, and distribute 'em!

 

Way to go Chicago! This was really great to see! I'm glad we are taking care of our neighbors.

 
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submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

Look, if these complete morons on the Right want to vote against their self-interests and America, they are beyond help, and all I will do is keep working my a-- off to make sure people understand this.

What we have is a failure to communicate on the Left.

The truth is these people support the America-attacking blowhard because he stirs their cold blood. He makes them feel good about looking backward instead of at all the possibilities ahead. He makes them feel good about thinking they are the only thing that matters and that they have somehow been cheated out of their dark, empty lives.

They don’t want to make America better. They want to make everybody else’s lives worse.

All they are is angry, and have finally found a lewd, racist conman who can put a megaphone to their tantrums, and deal the rest of America plenty of pain. He has no goddamn answers for them or us.

What we have right now is a MASSIVE messaging problem.

From the minute the Biden Administration took power it worked like hell to tackle a global crisis that was exacerbated by the previous administration. I mean, holy s--- even infrastructure got done, and do you know who has benefited most from that? White people.

If that didn't resonate, it’s not because it didn’t happen. It’s because too many people didn’t know about it.

 

Gov. Pritzker welcomed Jen Psaki to Chicago in the best way possible

 

Interesting research from Anthropic. I'm looking forward to reading follow-on work, and I really hope that this will be tested on open source models (like Mistral) to confirm the method.

 
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