Joined November 2015
518 Photos and videos
HackerSploit retweeted
Someone put Fable 5 on the pirate bay, 3.4TB 😂
Community note
A Pirate Bay search for "fable" returns no relevant results, and further, there is no "Other / Models" category as claimed in the screenshot. thepiratebay.org/search.php?q=f…
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HackerSploit retweeted
Jun 10
Me prompting Claude fable 5 at 3 am be like:
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HackerSploit retweeted
‼️ Nightmare Eclipse is back on GitHub under a new alias and has released a new Windows Defender vulnerability zero-day called RoguePlanet. PoC: github.com/MSNightmare/Rogue… New GitHub Account: github.com/MSNightmare
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HackerSploit retweeted
I see diplomacy is no longer part of the disclosure process
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HackerSploit retweeted
Had Claude Fable 5 log network packets and display them as cars on a highway, different car types = different packet types
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HackerSploit retweeted
It's official, we have AGI.
Introducing Claude Fable 5: a Mythos-class model that we’ve made safe for general use. Its capabilities exceed those of any model we’ve ever made generally available.
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HackerSploit retweeted
A French engineer who lives quietly in Paris has spent 30 years writing software that the entire internet now runs on without knowing his name. He wrote the code that streams every YouTube video, every Netflix show, every TikTok clip. He wrote the code that runs the virtual servers underneath AWS, Google Cloud, and Microsoft Azure. He calculated more digits of pi than anyone in history. He has no Twitter. He has no marketing. He just keeps shipping. His name is Fabrice Bellard. Here is the story, because almost nobody outside the systems programming world knows what one man has built. Fabrice was born in 1972 in Grenoble, France. He studied at École Polytechnique, the top French engineering school. He never went to Silicon Valley. He never built a startup empire. He just wrote code. In 2000 he started a project called FFmpeg, an open-source multimedia framework for encoding, decoding, and streaming video. He was 28. The project did one thing nobody else had done well. It handled every video and audio format that existed, in one library, on every operating system. He led it himself for years. Today FFmpeg is the invisible engine of the internet. YouTube uses it. Netflix uses it. VLC uses it. Chrome and Firefox use parts of it. Every Android phone, every iPhone, every smart TV, every video editing tool you have ever touched runs FFmpeg somewhere underneath. If you have watched a video on a screen in the last 20 years, Fabrice's code processed it. He was not done. In 2003 he started QEMU, a machine emulator and virtualizer. He wrote it solo until version 0.7.1 in 2005. QEMU lets you run any operating system on any other operating system. It became the foundation of modern virtualization. KVM, the Linux kernel hypervisor, runs on top of QEMU. Every major cloud provider, AWS, Google Cloud, Microsoft Azure, IBM Cloud, runs virtual machines on infrastructure built around it. The Quick Emulator is the most cited piece of cloud infrastructure code on Earth. He kept going. In 2001 he won the International Obfuscated C Code Contest with a small C compiler that grew into TCC, the Tiny C Compiler. TCC can compile and boot a Linux kernel from source in under 15 seconds. In 2004 he calculated the most digits of pi ever computed at the time, using a personal desktop computer and an algorithm he derived himself called Bellard's formula. In 2011 he wrote a complete PC emulator in pure JavaScript that runs Linux in your browser, a project called JSLinux that engineers still cannot believe is real. In 2019 he released QuickJS, a small but complete JavaScript engine that fits where V8 cannot. In 2021 he released NNCP, a neural network based lossless data compressor that immediately took the lead on the Large Text Compression Benchmark. Then he turned his attention to large language models. He built TextSynth Server, a web server with a REST API for running LLMs locally. He released ts_zip and ts_sms, compression utilities that use language models to compress text and short messages at ratios traditional algorithms cannot reach. He released TSAC, a very low bitrate audio compression system. In December 2025 he released Micro QuickJS, a new JavaScript engine for microcontrollers, separate from QuickJS, designed for environments with almost no memory. Fabrice co-founded a telecom company called Amarisoft in 2012, where he serves as CTO. Amarisoft builds 4G and 5G base station software used by carriers and labs around the world. He has been running it for over a decade while continuing to ship personal projects from his own home page at bellard dot org He has no Twitter. He has no Instagram. He gives almost no interviews. His personal website is a flat list of projects with no styling, no fonts, no marketing copy. Just titles and links. A quiet French engineer who never moved to Silicon Valley wrote the code that quietly runs the internet. He is still shipping.
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HackerSploit retweeted
Anthropic with Cybersecurity experts right now:
🚨 ANTHROPIC JUST PUBLISHED A 36-PAGE SECURITY GUIDE THAT BASICALLY TELLS YOU TO STOP TRUSTING YOUR OWN AI AGENTS. If you run agents on Claude Code, MCP servers, or automation tools, pay attention. The attack timeline has collapsed. AI models compress the gap between a vulnerability and a working exploit from months to hours, for mere dollars. Agents introduce new autonomous risks, from tool poisoning to context memory manipulation. The most useful idea in the guide is Anthropic's new security test: Does a control make an attack impossible, or just tedious? Automated attackers have unlimited patience. They will grind straight through friction like rate limits and 2FA. To defend at the speed of AI, you need hard barriers and automated defensive operations. Here is how Anthropic says you should lock down agents: → Treat static API keys as compromised. Use short-lived tokens that expire in minutes. → Apply "Least Agency": explicitly limit what each tool can DO. → Sandbox agents that process untrusted inputs like emails and web pages. → Scope permissions dynamically per task, not permanently. I've added the link to the guide in the 🧵↓
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HackerSploit retweeted
spent my 11-hour flight back from europe working on a very long report. started as a slack message but morphed into a several pages long doc. wifi was as shitty as it gets. after finally making it home i realized that the computer had forcefully restarted. opened slack: draft was gone :( hail mary: claude pls save me, no clue how but pls try it checked APFS snapshots, time machine, slack indexeddb, write-ahead logs, service worker / http caches, local storage, app logs, hibernation image... nothing. all gone but then... it realized i have alfred installed. so it checked the clipboard snapshots alfred keeps in sqlite. sad news: alfred clipboard memory gets deleted after 24h. aggressive retention policy. however! when sqlite runs DELETE, nothing gets actually deleted. it only marks pages as reusable, but it doesn't override the physical bytes. so claude decided to do a raw-scan of the db, reverse eng alfred data format, figure out the portion containing the timestamp, stitched everything back together across overflow pages... and handed me the exact final version of my report, the last one i cmd C'd all this, in a single shot ... day 200 of "what if you had an elite hacker you can ask anything to"
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HackerSploit retweeted
THIS is what I pay my internet bills for man, fucking amazing stuff!!!!
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HackerSploit retweeted
PSA: APKPure is distributing a malicious copy of Telegram.
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May 19
bro got VS Code on one side and peace of mind on the other 😭
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HackerSploit retweeted
A love story written in red and white @arsenal ❤️🤍
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HackerSploit retweeted
TeamUIX has fully reverse-engineered the original 2001 Xbox dashboard and turned it into a real PC application called UIX Desktop. It uses authentic Xbox code, so it is much more than just a visual theme or skin. The project, also known as Theseus, recreates the complete dashboard with all the classic animations, menus, and feel from the old console. >The app runs natively on Windows, Linux, and Mac. >You can manually add your Steam games with their setup tools and launch them straight from the old Xbox-style interface. >Xbox modders from TeamUIX have worked on this for around six years. It started during the COVID period and is now in early access.
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HackerSploit retweeted
Apr 29
got doom running in favicon favicons have small resolution and low fps so not much playable
Animated favicon for a client
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HackerSploit retweeted
I guess Apple saw my tweet. Apple has released an emergency update to the Apple Support app (v5.13.1) to remove the Claude.md files
Apr 30
Apple accidentally left Claude.md files in today's Apple Support app update (v5.13)
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Apr 23
There is also a pre-alpha Linux version brewing 👀
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Now who’s laughing
🚨 Bitwarden CLI 2026.4.0 was compromised as part of the ongoing Checkmarx supply chain campaign after attackers abused a GitHub Action in Bitwarden’s CI/CD pipeline. We’ll continue updating our coverage as more details are confirmed. socket.dev/blog/bitwarden-cl…
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HackerSploit retweeted
🚨 Bitwarden CLI 2026.4.0 was compromised as part of the ongoing Checkmarx supply chain campaign after attackers abused a GitHub Action in Bitwarden’s CI/CD pipeline. We’ll continue updating our coverage as more details are confirmed. socket.dev/blog/bitwarden-cl…
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