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NCA: Children hacking with Kali Linux, Tor, and Discord?

Wait. This reddit post is NOT a joke?

Humankind is doomed, srsly

IMHO stupid people are parents too. They are scammed, told by some youtube crap presenters, sales man, THEY NEED AV. There is no other way and everything is a lie, your kid lies to you(the basic irony). Hard to blame. Because the quality of the content around is horrid and unregulated.
 
IMHO stupid people are parents too. They are scammed, told by some youtube crap presenters, sales man, THEY NEED AV. There is no other way and everything is a lie, your kid lies to you(the basic irony). Hard to blame. Because the quality of the content around is horrid and unregulated.

in this case I really dislike the stepfather mainly because he got angry and demanded the kid paid the firewall back. Ignorance =! stupidity, not knowing isn't bad as such, but how you deal with new stuff is very important.
 
Backtrack not mentioned
it can be a liveCD ( no files on HD ) or it can be installed
 
but how you deal with new stuff is very important.

The stepfather was properly worked on by the product salesman... well daily job, he knows his ways, sweet talk etc, here's the result. Rebel youngster. Ignorance and stupidity often comes hand in hand, depends on the severity of the case.

Normally, we don't complain on reddit about such matters, that's also a bit odd. I would have asked my IT teacher for help, as they are trusted persons can assist in cases like that, further the teacher could call and approach the parents also the parents should have respect and trust in the teacher because of his standing position. That's the normal way in my books, I often seen cases like that. Explaining and solving some common conflicts in between parents and children.

Still, that's the fact, the amount of information quality for the masses is very poor. Online usually works as double edged sword. You can get so many wrong answers, so cases like these do not surprise me.

Backtrack not mentioned
it can be a liveCD ( no files on HD ) or it can be installed

Go full retard, get a floppy running KolibriOS, some may call that sorcery or being possessed or something, how this works. Old English fellow Matthew Hopkins must be called.
 
Backtrack not mentioned
Backtrack is now Kali. If anything, it's the kids that should report on their parents for using this ghost of 2000's.
P.S. I should have a liveCD somewhere in my desk as well.... please don't call British Police. :fear:
 
yes that's our police force for ya, you carnt get them to investigate a real crime outside London but there shithot if your a kid or non white or got no tax on your car.
 
Typical example of UK police desk-job creation because we may get hurt if we have to go out of the station.
 
Oh god... as I read that, I am reminded of what it's like to explain important, routine things to a 4-year-old. All the way down to the part where you kind of give in to part of their reality and make little compromises to keep it on a level they understand... and then things go. Not always right, not always perfect, and you find yourself saying all kinds of things you never thought you'd be saying in your life, but they do go. So much more relatable than I thought it would be, in all of the worst ways. Oh that poor family.

I see this same mentality from some parents at work. And the thing is... there will be 1 or 2 in the group who are genuinely neurotic about everything. The rest could be pretty normal and grounded in reality, but the moment a neurotic parent stands up and starts putting ideas out there, they spread. And it can linger for months, after which point most people kind of come down to earth and realize that it's stupid, not really a concern, and not worth the trouble. I've seen these people start putting money down on these ideas, start getting sticker-shock, and then come around to realizing that it's all drama. That is literally the first time they sincerely realize that nothing about whatever the obsession is makes any sense. Weird progression. Groupthink is like a drug... or maybe some kind of spiritual possession that just floats through groups of people with similar parameters in play. There are only a handful of people actually responsible for everything that's going down, but instead of saying something about it, everyone else just regurgitates it to keep things going.

Makes me glad my parents were more chill than that. Man, I can't imagine. Their rationale was "That's all weird over there and I don't know how I feel about it, but I don't know anyone who knows what any of that stuff is, let alone how to make that machine do those things, so this is life now..."

They would catch wind of the same kind of stupid crap and ask me about it, and I would explain it to them. If I knew something was exploitable, I would say how and not even have to think twice about it, because to me it was like "but why would I do that?" So after a while they kind of got used to it. At least I was honest about what was possible. They understood that, at least. I never told them about the time I took our first home computer apart and put it back together just to see how that all went down. For a couple of years they didn't even realize I had set it up for a windows/linux dual boot. I just had the bootloader auto to windows right away. You had to go from a usb stick to start it. I didn't necessarily mean for it to go that way... I kind of broke the bootloader. Tense moments in my mid childhood. :rolleyes: But mostly the point was to not interfere with either of them using it. Over time, I got it running much better and the questions kinda stopped being about 'what if' or 'I read that' and it became normal.

The kind of thing in that post, I would only read about online and just kinda hope my own parents knew better.

Now, I'm stuck managing all of their technological things and I don't know if that's necessarily better. Rather than being scared and dubious of everything, they think I know everything at this point. At any rate I'm glad I never had to sneak around like that.
 
Oh god... as I read that, I am reminded of what it's like to explain important, routine things to a 4-year-old. All the way down to the part where you kind of give in to part of their reality and make little compromises to keep it on a level they understand... and then things go. Not always right, not always perfect, and you find yourself saying all kinds of things you never thought you'd be saying in your life, but they do go. So much more relatable than I thought it would be, in all of the worst ways. Oh that poor family.

I see this same mentality from some parents at work. And the thing is... there will be 1 or 2 in the group who are genuinely neurotic about everything. The rest could be pretty normal and grounded in reality, but the moment a neurotic parent stands up and starts putting ideas out there, they spread. And it can linger for months, after which point most people kind of come down to earth and realize that it's stupid, not really a concern, and not worth the trouble. I've seen these people start putting money down on these ideas, start getting sticker-shock, and then come around to realizing that it's all drama. That is literally the first time they sincerely realize that nothing about whatever the obsession is makes any sense. Weird progression. Groupthink is like a drug... or maybe some kind of spiritual possession that just floats through groups of people with similar parameters in play. There are only a handful of people actually responsible for everything that's going down, but instead of saying something about it, everyone else just regurgitates it to keep things going.

Makes me glad my parents were more chill than that. Man, I can't imagine. Their rationale was "That's all weird over there and I don't know how I feel about it, but I don't know anyone who knows what any of that stuff is, let alone how to make that machine do those things, so this is life now..."

They would catch wind of the same kind of stupid crap and ask me about it, and I would explain it to them. If I knew something was exploitable, I would say how and not even have to think twice about it, because to me it was like "but why would I do that?" So after a while they kind of got used to it. At least I was honest about what was possible. They understood that, at least. I never told them about the time I took our first home computer apart and put it back together just to see how that all went down. For a couple of years they didn't even realize I had set it up for a windows/linux dual boot. I just had the bootloader auto to windows right away. You had to go from a usb stick to start it. I didn't necessarily mean for it to go that way... I kind of broke the bootloader. Tense moments in my mid childhood. :rolleyes: But mostly the point was to not interfere with either of them using it. Over time, I got it running much better and the questions kinda stopped being about 'what if' or 'I read that' and it became normal.

The kind of thing in that post, I would only read about online and just kinda hope my own parents knew better.

Now, I'm stuck managing all of their technological things and I don't know if that's necessarily better. Rather than being scared and dubious of everything, they think I know everything at this point. At any rate I'm glad I never had to sneak around like that.
Bro, You just responded 3330 characters to a "Yeah" ;)

Now putting that aside,
I agree the misinformation is incredible.
It became partly business on its own too.
People are not willing to share knowledge instead they'd prefer to make a business out of it.

In this specific case its the police itself who is misinformed which is sad and somewhat disappointing that ones who supposed to protect us have brains size of a peanut.

I remember there was a "dictionary" somewhere on the web for parents to find out when their kids talk drugs,sex and rock'n'roll.
 
Its always funny seeing things like this that are obviously geared towards people with very little knowledge of computing, created by people who probably have equally little knowledge and just using a bunch of buzzwords.

Its the same reason i put some Pokemon in the list of technologies/languages i know in my CV.
 
Normally, we don't complain on reddit about such matters, that's also a bit odd. I would have asked my IT teacher for help, as they are trusted persons can assist in cases like that, further the teacher could call and approach the parents also the parents should have respect and trust in the teacher because of his standing position. That's the normal way in my books, I often seen cases like that. Explaining and solving some common conflicts in between parents and children.

Considering a lot heavyweights and IT professionals responded (including a "global solutions architect leader" at Red Hat) offered help I'd say it wasn't a bad idea. I mean I hate Reddit and well a lot pf things online as much as anyone but we can't party like it's 1999 anymore. :(
 
Bro, You just responded 3330 characters to a "Yeah" ;)
I was responding to the post he shared. I just left out the embedded post from the quote to simplify things. I figured everybody would see the 'yeah' and know what I was responding to. There are several posts on it. :ohwell:

Also, did you really run a character count on me, bro? :wtf:

I remember there was a "dictionary" somewhere on the web for parents to find out when their kids talk drugs,sex and rock'n'roll.
I remember all sorts of things like that, too. Mostly just lists and articles tabbing out whatever arbitrary things they have 'deciphered' like mystics. Certain clothes or accessories. Or a game. Some website. I think my favorite was in middle school, girls liked to wear those really thin gel bracelets and give em to each other. Somewhat of a primitive form of 'likes' I think. Pretty regular stuff for innocent girls to do. But of course out there online parents would forward email guides on what each color means. I'm talkin like someone would make a geocities page, or angelfire. It looks exactly like you're probably picturing.

There was a color that was supposed to mean you were "down." For what, varied, between all of the fun things. It was like somehow, the bracelets had to be some sort of advanced code developed to bypass parents... because they needed bracelets to do that, obviously. :laugh: Kids started teasing each other based on those lists and they went out of style fast. It went from being a thing kids did just being kids and thinking nothing of to "you will be openly judged for wearing the color bracelet you like."

But it was funny because different girls wouldn't be allowed to wear different colors to school (I guess they couldn't agree on what the bad colors were,) so they'd trade them on the bus to get their favorites. Keep in mind, we were all around 11.

I swear, they probably remembered having things like that soured by their parents. Adds new parts to their reality. Their nutty, overly-controlling parents kind of stole an innocent moment from their lives and probably never realized. And those kids had to know that. That kind of thing stays in your head. It'd be no wonder if it made them rebellious. We all know how effective that old D.A.R.E scaremongering was... at getting kids to want to try drugs.

Kids are diabolical geniuses sometimes, but it can be interesting to see how people who have forgotten what's its like try to interpret that genius and fail miserably. The technological gap just adds another layer. You'd think we'd be about past that and fully into a couple generations of parents now who aren't total noobs at everything. But I guess when the people in the government above them are still about 30 years late to the party, that changes things somehow... or maybe it doesn't. Were there any parents who sniffed this out and hopped on social media? I like to think it caught some bad buzz from the many people out there who do keep totally with the times, are familiar with tech, and happen to be some of the same parents this is targeted at.


My big question here is... Okay, so they acknowledged discord as something used for hacking, right? This is something they consider to be a dubious tool. So that must mean it is someone's job to, I dunno... troll through random kids' twitch discords all day for signs of nefarious activity or something. What a job that would be eh? Sitting around listening in on discord chats and sifting through Kali Linux communities for child hacker splinter groups.

Tor... man any time someone hears dark web or deep web they think it's like some sci-fi dark alley - it's the mysterious underbelly to them, like not just anybody can go there and it must be a hacker rite of passage to find it. But what they're missing is that most of the stuff they'd actually want to protect their kids from is on the publicly indexed internet. There's some shady stuff on the other side, sure. But the regular internet is honestly so much worse.
 
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Considering a lot heavyweights and IT professionals responded (including a "global solutions architect leader" at Red Hat) offered help I'd say it wasn't a bad idea. I mean I hate Reddit and well a lot pf things online as much as anyone but we can't party like it's 1999 anymore. :(

Imagine that kid telling his stepdad about something about that redhat guy said.

Meanwhile that parent googles red hat. :laugh::laugh::laugh:

1582109780192.png


They wouldn't care, people only would listen to someone they know in the face, and not also all the time. Some random guy from the internet... nope... it won't work.
 
I was responding to the post he shared. I just left out the embedded post from the quote to simplify things. I figured everybody would see the 'yeah' and know what I was responding to. There are several posts on it. :ohwell:

Also, did you really run a character count on me, bro? :wtf:
Im soo guilty!
I read that post but I didnt notice that "Yeah" underneath the link!
Thought it refers to some other post.
Didn't try to be offensive, more like playful!
Your posts are usually solid reads! :D:D

as for the rest of the post:
I soo agree there!
actually it seems fitting to mention a book im reading recently : "Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind" by Yuval Noah Harari.
"Imagination" plays a big role here like Harari writes in his book.
Thats how we operate as species and those behaviours are all connected, surfacing in every field.
 
I think that's a general trend, at this point, for quite a few countries.
Agreed. However, it is most apparent in England.
These claims are rather extreme and wrong.
Your opinion, not supported by historical information.
Can anyone at last leave the WW2 alone?
No. If we do not carefully remember the lessons of the past, we are doomed to repeat them. Your inability to understand that wisdom is disturbing.
 
And exactly what historical information proves your comment????
This is not a forum for historical dissertation. However, the level of control the British government is asserting over the public is very similar to the controls the NAZI party imposed on the German people. There are many examples.
 
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Its the same reason i put some Pokemon in the list of technologies/languages i know in my CV.
LoL. It reminded me our old kid joke
I know karate, kung-fu, judo... and lots of other scary words )))
 
Im soo guilty!
I read that post but I didnt notice that "Yeah" underneath the link!
Thought it refers to some other post.
Didn't try to be offensive, more like playful!
Your posts are usually solid reads! :D:D
Haha I'm not offended. I've just made a hobby of going from serious to sarcastic in no time. If you have to wonder, and you know you weren't trying to piss me off, it's safe to assume I'm probably not. I don't think anyone online has managed to truly piss me off. Makes more sense to have fun with it, or just go offline. You'd definitely know. I'm one of those people who is generally agreeable... until a line is really, truly crossed, after which it is a very different kind of exchange. Very few people earn the chance to see that side of me :laugh:

as for the rest of the post:
I soo agree there!
actually it seems fitting to mention a book im reading recently : "Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind" by Yuval Noah Harari.
"Imagination" plays a big role here like Harari writes in his book.
Thats how we operate as species and those behaviours are all connected, surfacing in every field.
Interesting... that actually reminds me of a nuero/cognitive science book called "Thinking: Fast and Slow"

It's a research and study driven examination of the many, many quirks in how people interact, problem-solve, and piece together reality. Daniel Kahnemen (what a name, right?) has been examining this stuff for a long time. The depth to and body behind his thoughts on it reflect that. He looks at everyone - from regular everyday people of the 1st world, to people under extraordinary conditions, and even to those working in more intellectually-driven fields. He shows the many predictable ways we can be wrong, and what being wrong about that means for the outcome, or what role that mechanism plays in actually making everything work. What I find especially interesting is that the way some of these systems work actually is not contingent on getting everything right.

The book ties all of these little traits together to demonstrably show, through interesting studies, as well as more relatable experiences, and anecdotes, two different primary modes that all people operate under, each with its own set of blind spots and caveats. I mean, he really lays it out and dives in and for some reason it just made so much sense to me - both when I look at myself and other people. It's a lot to digest, but pretty good food for thought.

Everyone in here (and really... everyone in general) is critical of these sorts of junk biases and use of low-quality information. So we're quick to jump on people we see making the wrong snap judgements, often with at least somewhat pessimistic assumptions regarding the other person's or whole group's intellect, but I can't be the only one who catches himself falling into the same traps. Most of the time, you wouldn't even know it. By the time you had the chance, your mind had shot completely past it. Only a more evocative experience relating to it can shock you out at that point - new information, easy to reach and fully comprehend quickly, that challenges the information you used before in a fundamental way. That has to happen first, and then the part of you that reflects and contemplates can get to work. We try to use simpler, but less accurate methods that work most times on the first go, hoping that's enough. And if that fails, our minds say its time to step back and make sure we get every detail right. It runs on an as-needed basis, and there is a clear set of requirements for that determination to be made.

My takeaway was that beneath our whole means of making sense of things are all of these singular, unflinching operations that actually get things wrong a lot of the time, but we don't even notice because a lot of times we are still able to function... in a sense, everything that we do and see is built up on complex interactions between different biases and fallacies, which just happen to be fundamental to how we figure anything out. They define so much of how things go for us in our endeavors and interactions. For better and worse, it makes us who we are. Pretty interesting book, though very dry, with a tendency to dwell too much on each study.

The overall presentation is pretty neutral. It made me realize that human interaction, or really, anything to do with gathering and using information, is inherently messy - and that it's actually not a terrible way for people to be. It's something that also leads to progress that wouldn't be possible if we were rationally combing through everything consciously. There are benefits to being able to parse a lot of thoughts, language-driven information, and sensory input in a VERY short time, even if it's a far less accurate way to go about things.

We couldn't have survived at all without being able to do that. It is the favored way of operating... much more efficient to set a bar for how much information you need and just stopping the moment you hit that point. The side that wants to figure things out doesn't ever want to kick in without enforced impetus - it's only when someone hits a wall or practices an active discipline (basically delaying gratification,) that the slower, more methodical side of their mind fully manifests. It takes much more time and energy, which are pretty finite. Our minds tire of things pretty easily, so we instinctively save the horsepower for those moments when we absolutely need it. Again, survival.

I can describe the two modes simply. The faster, primary one is characterized as a primitive filter, passing through a lot of info quickly before discarding most of it - there doesn't need to be a lot of support or justification for something so long as it is sufficient for the task and leads to the desired outcome. The slower, secondary one halts on and parses everything before determining what information is and is not valuable - it searches for the reasons behind the information available. If the first is intuition, the second is contemplation. Guess which one we all rely on 90% of the time.

This is probably why debate is a skill that many people consider pretty difficult to become versed in. We are not built or accustomed to holding ourselves in that "fine comb" state of being at a capcity beyond short bursts with "passive" recharge time between... it is not natural for us to bear down on figuring something out on that level and continually working out how to convey the information accurately. In most cases throughout any one person's day, they aren't any better served by it. The "just grab everything fast and quickly toss what doesn't immediately matter" method is far more favorable.

I said this before in a thread about IQ over in the lounge, I think: Humans simply are not very good at processing things beyond the realm of immediacy. We only do it when we have to.

It pays to be aware of how our thoughts and means of sorting information mislead. But I think it also pays to remember that simply knowing this to be true of yourself doesn't exclude you from the influence of those things. Nobody is safe from these weird snafus.
 
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