Last night the 11yo broke down the Google Slides middle school Chatroom for me:
1. At first they used a Google doc but the infinite scroll was too chaotic
2. In the slide deck each new slide is one “post”—some all text, some images, some both—
3. They use slides’ comments feature to “reply” to each other’s “posts”
4. This allows participants to easily flip between posts using the slide thumbnail navigation, so they can find the conversations they care about easily
5. He owns the file & if anyone spams it, deletes other people’s posts, or gets nasty, he can revert the file to its previous save state & remove the spammer’s access
6. He did share the file with me on purpose, I think because he was proud & wanted me to see what he’d made
Essentially they’ve created a chatroom with moderation in Google Slides, so they can get around the school’s ban on platforms like Discord. It’s kind of brilliant
Kudos to Coinbase for publishing this fantastic write-up on social engineering. Really would love to see more orgs normalizing their wins (because make no mistake about it, this IS a win).
https://www.coinbase.com/blog/social-engineering-a-coinbase-case-study
Our (free) AWS Canarytokens have always been popular.
Today, we released the Azure alternative on our canarytokens.org server¹
Attackers who find ‘em have to use ‘em (and reveal their presence).
Check out Pieter’s blog post at:
https://blog.thinkst.com/2023/02/canarytokens-org-welcomes-azure-login-certificate-token.html
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¹ also free
attackerkb published their GoAnywhere analysis. No more reasons to hold back my blog post then, I wrote days ago.
https://frycos.github.io/vulns4free/2023/02/06/goanywhere-forgotten.html