Blog

  • More exploits and fun. DePaul university has not IP restricted their printers. You can just ftp into any of these IPs and dump a print job:

    140.192.11.10, 140.192.11.11, 140.192.11.14, 140.192.11.22, 140.192.11.24, 140.192.15.121, 140.192.15.122, 140.192.15.161, 140.192.15.245, 140.192.15.251, 140.192.16.16, 140.192.17.12, 140.192.18.121, 140.192.18.122, 140.192.18.123… and the list goes on.

  • Well, gotta love the errors of others. Bugtraq was specifically told not to release this code for a telnetd exploit, but now everyone has it. I tested it on one of my servers (FreeBSD 4.3 release) and it worked. It has to send 16 MEGS of data to the target box, but it works. Try it on your friends today!

  • Controlling the users on a BSD box just became so much clearer to me.

  • I, for one, am quite happy that Brunching Shuttlecocks rates a random category more often then once a week.

  • OpenSOB (9:14 PM):I am lonely!
    GooglyMinotaur (9:14 PM):
    . i’m here for you
    OpenSOB (9:14 PM):
    do you love me?
    GooglyMinotaur (9:14 PM):
    ! absolutely
    OpenSOB (9:14 PM):
    why?
    GooglyMinotaur (9:14 PM):
    . cause i said so
    OpenSOB (9:14 PM):
    thanks!
    GooglyMinotaur (9:14 PM):
    np

    You should all IM the Radiohead AIMbot now.

  • I hate the Ann Arbor Art Fair. The fair has yet to begin, but the annoyance flows strong today. I live on South University, which is currently covered in canopies full of ‘art’. I work on Maynard, which is currently covered in canopies full of ‘art’. The places I eat, sleep and work are overrun, and the fair hasn’t even started yet. Life will get much worse when the tens of thousands of people begin to slowly crawl from canopy to canopy, either feigning a vague interest in the life work of an artist or exclaiming praise for the bravura.

  • Throw 40 machines at a project, reap the results: I broke into the top 1000 on Distributed.net. That wasn’t even using all of the machines at my disposal. Lets see, what machines am I using?

    • i386

      • 1.2GHz Athlon (Windows ME)

      • 900MHz Athlon (OpenBSD 2.9) (2 total)

      • 800MHZ Duron (FreeBSD 4.3)

      • 500MHz Pentium III (Windows 2000 Server)

      • 366MHz Celeron (OpenBSD 2.9)

      • 266MHz Pentium (OpenBSD 2.9)

      • 200MHz Pentium (OpenBSD 2.9)

    • PPC

      • 733 MHz G4 (Mac OS X Server 10.0.4)

      • 533 MHz Dual G4 (Mac OS X Server 10.0.4)

      • 500 MHz G4 (Mac OS 9.1) (8 total)

      • 400 MHz G3 (Mac OS 9.1) (5 total)

      • 266 MHz G3 (Mac OS 9.1) (20 total)

    That’s 43 machines and 18.25GHz so far. There are still 8 more iMacs (2.13GHz) that I am not using yet. They won’t help much, but it all adds up…

  • D’oh! I forgot that distributed.net usually has a few projects at a time and that you have to configure your client if you want to work on one specific project. All of my clients (all 30 of them) are now working solely on RC5. About 600 work hours were spent on OGR, WTF that is…

  • Flash of genius! I don’t know why I didn’t think of this earlier. Just watch this page over the next few weeks….

  • I broke the search engine earlier and since I switch servers so often, there is no point trying to rebuild it everywhere I go. It’s gone.