Joined February 2008
380 Photos and videos
Hope you enjoy this!
5
48
448
13,233
It's alive!
9
102
771
24,396
Bill Pollock -- nostarch@infosec.exchange retweeted
A @humble bundle for people learning Python, people automating busywork, people teaching the machines, and people trying to escape Excel. Pay what you want. DRM-free. Supports @ThePSF. humblebundle.com/books/pytho…
15
65
29,465
Bill Pollock -- nostarch@infosec.exchange retweeted
40% off everything at nostarch.com through May 25 with code LONGWEEKEND. Start building your stack 📚
3
33
147
12,024
Bill Pollock -- nostarch@infosec.exchange retweeted
Apr 17
Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei: “50% of all tech jobs, entry-level lawyers, consultants, and finance professionals will be completely wiped out within 1–5 years.”
1,048
1,150
6,436
8,519,799
Bill Pollock -- nostarch@infosec.exchange retweeted
On my way to Berlin to celebrate the life of FX. And yes, I feel honored to have met him, to have had the opportunity to receive his mentorship and guidance, to later become his peer and finally a friend. I can't stop thinking about the imense loss. Good to be able to join others that feel the same.
1
2
53
4,864
Bill Pollock -- nostarch@infosec.exchange retweeted
The cat's out of the bag! My latest book, "The Secret Life of Circuits", is available in early access: lcamtuf.coredump.cx/blog/sec… It's what I wish I had when I was starting out. Electrons to embedded systems, 290 color illustrations and 420 pages of well-explained theory.
22
62
314
28,296
Claude made a funny: "Tell Claude Code to fetch it directly from the server where I already staged it -- just kidding, it's not there yet."
2
1
442
Bill Pollock -- nostarch@infosec.exchange retweeted
Everyone today is a hacker in a sense but there are very few OG hackers on which shoulders we stand Oh dude, Felix “FX” Lindner you were so much a hackers hacker and you will be missed RIP my friend and thank you
51
135
578
80,462
Bill Pollock -- nostarch@infosec.exchange retweeted
We lost FX. A lot of people wrote about this so I feel comfortable sharing here too. I’m heartbroken. We’re heartbroken. At 8 am pacific today (Monday), we are gathering on Zoom to share memories of FX, as a community. Ping me for a link.
7
16
127
33,538
Remembering Len Sassaman. I miss him.
1
5
398
Bill Pollock -- nostarch@infosec.exchange retweeted
Just wrote a bluetooth scanner that can be used on any OS that will single out a specific MAC address. Currently doing range testing on an implantable device with a DJI mavic I have with a directional antenna mounted on it to test distance.
For the Nancy Guthrie case, an idea and maybe a crazy one but she had a pacemaker which often implantable devices use bluetooth such as Medtronic's. Couldn't you war-drive (drones even better) with a high gain antenna with amplifiers - get the MAC address from the provider, and comb the city and locations looking for that specific mac? I'm also sure if you had cooperation with the manufacturer they may provide the protocol, law enforcement could use a custom interrogator to "ping" the device and elicit a response. Pacemakers last months or years. It would continue to transmit even if (God forbid) someone was deceased. High gain LNA good SDR - 500 ft possible with class 2 transmitters (normally in bluetooth pacemakers - common in implants, ~10 mW output) Parabolic high sensitivity gear - 1000 ft in ideal RF conditions Not saying this range is possible, with BLE body interference 2.4ghz being a heavily used spectrum = much lower range. Previous research has tested insulin pumps upward of 300 ft in the past in BLE. Companies that use bluetooth in pacemakers: Medtronic Abbott Laboratories Boston Scientific Now in stating that - there's a bunch of limitations here - broadcast timing. They all use low power bluetooth, but if they have access to Nancy's phone and paired - would there be a way to take that pairing connection, amplify it and run it through? You could potentially extract pairing keys/secrets and emulate the phone's connection with an amplified setup (e.g., SDR spoofing the phone's BLE master role). A lot of "ifs" here just wondering if it's technically possible based on what I know these conditions would need to be true: The implant uses RF telemetry that can transmit without an external programmer actively interrogating it. The device is configured to advertise or beacon. The identifier is detectable passively. The identifier is not randomized. The device is currently transmitting. You are within viable range (which is likely very short). The RF environment is not swamping it. If solely using MICS frequencies this wouldn't work (402-405mhz): Very low power Designed for short-range use Often magnet-activated or programmer-initiated Session-based communication Encrypted/authenticated in modern systems The 2.4 GHz band is crowded; distinguishing one pacemaker from thousands of BLE devices in a city like Tucson would require a lot of noise reduction/filtering, but technically I think it's possible. Also note that law enforcement did state that the phone disconnected from the pacemaker - hinting at bluetooth was actually enabled. Papers used for analyzing this as a viable option: mdpi.com/1424-8220/20/16/460… mdpi.com/1424-8220/23/7/3411 mdpi.com/1996-1073/13/4/905 pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/article… pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/article… digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/c… secure-medicine.org/hubfs/Ar… sciencedirect.com/science/ar… medtronic.com/en-us/e/produc… armis.com/research/bleedingb… thinkmind.org/articles/cyber…
17
28
248
20,071
One more step backwards: The Environmental Protection Agency rejected the bedrock scientific finding that greenhouse gases threaten human life and well being. It means the agency can no longer regulate them.
1
267
Bill Pollock -- nostarch@infosec.exchange retweeted
Moltbook debate in a nutshell
178
3,820
60,908
1,046,534
ICE must be stopped. This organization is completely unchecked — armed agents running around our communities, threatening citizens, breaking laws, and ignoring the rule of law. That is not how this country works. 🧵
1
4
322
They've abandoned all attempts at de-escalation. Firing tear gas canisters. Pulling out weapons. Breaking car windows. Dragging people from their vehicles. Arresting them. Killing them.
2
2
288
No agency gets to operate above the law. Demand oversight. Demand accountability. Demand the rule of law
2
132