Hello! Hello. It's #nakeddiefriday today, and I wanted to show you one of the older works. This is an automotive ASIC fabbed for Toyota, part number DF028. I do not know the function of this particular device.
SiPron page: https://siliconprawn.org/archive/doku.php?id=infosecdj:toyota:d028f
✋ Stop writing #CSS yourself for your blog. Since 1998, the W3C provides a bunch of ready to use style-sheets: the W3C Core Styles. https://www.w3.org/StyleSheets/Core/Overview
Guaranteed to work on Netscape 4!
Anybody remember how twitter used to work over text message?
I think I broke that feature.
You could send and receive tweets, and do some basic interactions like following keywords - for example FOLLOW Guybrush Threepwood would text you any tweets about the classic Lucasarts Adventure Game series Monkey Island™.
So one day at work I had an idea. I took my Nokia and texted FOLLOW lol.
My phone immediately blew up. I got the next tweet someone posted that said lol. And the one after that.
I tried to text STOP lol but my phone couldn't multitask, so every new instance of lol interrupted my attempt to stop them. When my phone's text memory filled up (300!), I found out it deletes old texts and keeps going
So I turned my phone off to stop the flow (I didn't have unlimited texting, this was getting expensive!)
When I got home from the office, Twitter was down. For a while.
When it came back up, the text messaging feature did not come back up. Ever.
So #youtube is deleting videos of people showing how to install #Windows 11 on computers without TPMs and using local accounts. Can't imagine why.
So, please share mine! I make absolutely no money on my videos, I purely educate.
https://peertube.wtf/w/pqMrXFbzpJAS4r5NRj5o8j
Also 🖕 Microsoft
Automating COM/DCOM vulnerability research https://www.incendium.rocks/posts/Automating-COM-Vulnerability-Research/
🎃🎃 if you've got spooky business this weekend, don't forget to put on the Gameboy Halloween chiptune playlist! 🎃🎃
Someone Snuck Into a Cellebrite Microsoft Teams Call and Leaked Phone Unlocking Details
https://www.404media.co/someone-snuck-into-a-cellebrite-microsoft-teams-call-and-leaked-phone-unlocking-details/?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Posted into 404 Media @404-media-404media
Microsoft:
As much as 30% of the company's code is written by AI.
Also Microsoft:
Somehow we managed to make it so that clicking the x in Task Manager doesn't close the app. Whoopsie daisy!
We're spilling the TEE: We're disclosing vulnerabilities (CVE-2025-59054, CVE-2025-58356) in LUKS2 disk encryption affecting 8 confidential computing systems.
AMD, Intel and Nvidia have poured untold resources into building on-chip trusted execution environments. These enclaves use encryption to protect data and execution from being viewed or modified. The companies proudly declare that these TEEs will protect data and code even when the OS kernel has been thoroughly compromised. The chipmakers are considerably less vocal about an exclusion that physical attacks, which are becoming increasingly cheap and easy, aren't covered by the threat model These physical attacks use off the shelf equipment and only intermediate admin skills to completely break all TEEs made from these three chipmakers.
This shifting Security landscape leaves me asking a bunch of questions. What's the true value of a TEE going forward?. Can governments ever get subpoena rulings ordering a host provider to run this attack on their own infrastructure? Why do the companies market their TEEs so heavily for edge servers when one of the top edge-server threats is
physical attacks?
People say, "well yes. just run the server in Amazon or another top tier cloud provider and you'll be reasonably safe." The thing is, TEEs can only guarantee to a relying party that the server on the other end isn't infected and couldn't give up data even even if it was. There's no way for the relying party to know if the service is in Amazon or in an attackers's basement. So once again aren't we back to just trusting the cloud, which is precisely the problem TEEs were supposed to solve?
the most important question I have about this HackingTeam revival that was exposed by @oct0xor and co is if #YourBoySerge is still saving the day when the live demos fail during a sales pitch. or did they find a new Serge?
(anyone remember #YourBoySerge? or am I just really old?)
🚨🚨🚨 Absolutely insane stuff here. @lorenzofb spent months working on this story.
Peter Williams, former L3Harris Trenchant boss — the division that makes cyber exploits, zero-days and spyware for Western governments — has pleaded guilty to selling Trenchant's exploits to Russia.
There's an Azure outage, so in the Netherlands, rail services aren't working.
(Originally read "trains", but it's not the actual trains, it's ticket sales and planning)
https://nltimes.nl/2025/10/29/ns-hit-microsoft-cloud-outage-travel-planner-ticket-machines-affected
If Azure isn't back up in 15 minutes, everyone can go home.
I’ve just seen someone describe Windows 11 as a “sloperating system”.
Administrator Protection has finally been released in KB5067036. This is an optional update, but it does fix 7 of the 9 issues that I reported to MSRC (hopefully the other 2 get fixed next month as security bulletins). I honestly don't know if they've actually fixed the SSPI issues like my Kerberos bypass or not, I'm not inclined to check. People should kick the tyres on it, maybe there's still some bounties to be had :D