castleofargh
Sound Science Forum Moderator
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2011
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So you're the Stickman. : o
exactly! I'm one of those guys.
So you're the Stickman. : o
I can't offer any good sleep comments
Manga Rock on iOS was fun while it lasted, time to dust off the Android phones for TchymiLast night I found out that the best android app to browse sadpanda (can I say the app's full name?) EHV was depreciated and not actively developed / maintained anymore, since July '19. Much sadness, since it can show the comments on the doujins. Most of the time it's nonsense gaff, sometimes it's funny, and other times it's very useful.
The other closest thing that's not straight up use a browser is the Tchymi app and forks. It's nice and all, and have integration for search and reading of other H sites, but just for purely sadpanda though, it's a few steps down than EHV.
Using Tchymi for just following the mangas I readManga Rock on iOS was fun while it lasted, time to dust off the Android phones for Tchymi
Using Tchymi for just following the mangas I read
Finally ordered a Wireless mouse, maybe they are just as good as wired now.
New phone who disSo you guys have probably seen the Product Red iPhone 7.
Ordered a Razer Viper Ultimate.Which one is it?
Finally ordered a Wireless mouse, maybe they are just as good as wired now.
You mean the ones from middle school that shoots a giant red beam of light across the room?Who here remembers infrared wireless mice and keyboards......
You mean the ones from middle school that shoots a giant red beam of light across the room?
For almost eight years, a hacker has silently hijacked D-Link NVRs (network video recorders) and NAS (network-attached storage) devices into a botnet that had the sole purpose of connecting to online websites and download anime videos.
Named Cereals and first spotted in 2012, the botnet reached its peak in 2015 when it amassed more than 10,000 bots.
However, despite its size, the botnet operated without detection from most cyber-security firms. Currently, Cereals is slowly disappearing, as the vulnerable D-Link devices on which it fed all these years have started aging and are being decommissioned by their owners. Further, the botnet's decline was also accelerated when a ransomware strain named Cr1ptT0r wiped the Cereals malware from many D-Link systems in the winter of 2019.
Second, the botnet never strayed from its Anime video leeching purpose. Forcepoint said the botnet did not execute DDoS attacks, nor did it find evidence that the botnet tried to access user data stored on the NAS and NVR devices.
An honest-to-goodness weeb.https://www.zdnet.com/article/for-8...ive-iot-botnet-just-to-download-anime-videos/
That's one way to cheap out on seedboxes, I guess.