I have not read that book but I did read ''the ghost in the wires'' by him.
Really interesting story's of how hacking worked back in the day, but If you're looking for knowledge that can be used today it's a waste of time (accept maybe social engineering).
what people say and what people do are two different things
what people think they do and say how they do and how they actually do stuff are all different.
your mileage would be better if you just watched rob braxman videos which knows his stuff since he's pretty paranoid privacytuber (even better than poser loonix techtubers that only post on youtube).
It seems to me like this whole "be invisible" thing, which for most people started with Snowden in 2013, is a huge psyop.
I “fell for it” myself for years and it had such a strong effect on me that I still don’t have a social media channel. During that time I wrote and did so much, even entire websites, etc., but everything was anonymous, nothing was connected to my real identity.
In the end, it's as if I (the real person) didn't do anything, as if, looking back, I didn't even exist for years, I didn't leave any footprint.
I think that somehow left a bad influence on my psyche because it's very unnatural. In the real world (before the internet), the concept of doing something without any connection to you was completely absurd. And of course our brains still work that way.
I think you will generally lead a happier and healthier life if you stand 100% behind what you create and say. But I still haven't quite gotten there, so I don't know how to overcome this mindset of wanting to be as untrackable as possible.
I don't really care about le feds finding me or anything since I'm not a priority target but I've been harassed and stalked at work from weirdos online so I want to make it as difficult as possible for individuals and cyber criminals to target me. It's been insanely stressful on me and my family as well as detrimental to my career. I feel like staying ahead of such things is in my best interest.
old online circle doxxing me because i ghosted, im paranoid about them scanning for breadcrumbs on sensitive info from breaches and stuff because i know they are capable and aware of resources
I've been immersed in this kind of anonymity for so long since I refuse to tie down my real identity to anything, only an ephemeral alias which has no connection to me. I'm so divorced from the real world it's comical, and it's been sustainable for me which is even worse. My "real" identity feels less genuine than my aliases and it just can't be long term healthy, psychologically.
>I think you will generally lead a happier and healthier life if you stand 100% behind what you create and say
Yes, obviously. Of course, if you were do that now you will be destroyed for it because years ago you felt for the meme that discrimination is immoral and so now aliens hostile to you live amongst you and your fellow kind. And they will attack you when it's convenient for them to do so, so you cope by trying the impossible task of being invisible detaching yourself from you own actions.
You're a social animal, forever reliant on the work of others for your own work and on the well being of others for you own well being. Always were, always will be. You can fight it, or you can accept that policing who yourself and others associate with, ie keeping your kind clean of outsiders, was never immoral to begin with.
>is it worth reading?
maybe if you were living in the 80's
technology has moved along, it takes a lot more to be invisible on the internet these days. also he's a bit of a sensationalist larper.
On another note I just downloaded the Pegasus book, and it's read by a women.... I don't know why this effects me listening to it so much, but I couldn't get through the first 10 minutes.
Read it. Can confirm it's gay and a waste of time. His art of deception book is even gayer. Steer clear of that dead retard's work. Read Michael Bazzell's stuff instead.
If cyber security and hacking was written for the masses printed like this in physical book form its not even worth ur time and money
Best way to learn is by doing it 🙂 or other cuck methods of reading hacker resource manuals/FAQ from their forums
>famous hacker
>book
it probably says "use a vpn" and "use incognito tabs"
that doesnt hide your handshake
his dead body isnt even decomposed yet and people have already forgotten him
how is this how I find out he died? wtf.
why didn't I hear anything about this
it was literally everywhere
that's why I'm afraid to buy it, but I'm hoping it will have at least a few new concepts or theories
You have no idea why Kevin mitnick was
Who *
Fuck phoneposting
yes
If you do know it means he failed at being invisible
I know that he was a kike.
I have not read that book but I did read ''the ghost in the wires'' by him.
Really interesting story's of how hacking worked back in the day, but If you're looking for knowledge that can be used today it's a waste of time (accept maybe social engineering).
Anyone else have some good books?
I like learning about archaic tech too, thanks for the recommendation
I have nothing to hide
what people say and what people do are two different things
what people think they do and say how they do and how they actually do stuff are all different.
your mileage would be better if you just watched rob braxman videos which knows his stuff since he's pretty paranoid privacytuber (even better than poser loonix techtubers that only post on youtube).
no need to deride it, it's made for genpop normie audience, also it has to tell a compelling story instead of going on autistic deep dives
>world's most famous hacker
if he's world famous, that means he sucks
It seems to me like this whole "be invisible" thing, which for most people started with Snowden in 2013, is a huge psyop.
I “fell for it” myself for years and it had such a strong effect on me that I still don’t have a social media channel. During that time I wrote and did so much, even entire websites, etc., but everything was anonymous, nothing was connected to my real identity.
In the end, it's as if I (the real person) didn't do anything, as if, looking back, I didn't even exist for years, I didn't leave any footprint.
I think that somehow left a bad influence on my psyche because it's very unnatural. In the real world (before the internet), the concept of doing something without any connection to you was completely absurd. And of course our brains still work that way.
I think you will generally lead a happier and healthier life if you stand 100% behind what you create and say. But I still haven't quite gotten there, so I don't know how to overcome this mindset of wanting to be as untrackable as possible.
I don't really care about le feds finding me or anything since I'm not a priority target but I've been harassed and stalked at work from weirdos online so I want to make it as difficult as possible for individuals and cyber criminals to target me. It's been insanely stressful on me and my family as well as detrimental to my career. I feel like staying ahead of such things is in my best interest.
What's the story?
old online circle doxxing me because i ghosted, im paranoid about them scanning for breadcrumbs on sensitive info from breaches and stuff because i know they are capable and aware of resources
>old online circle doxxing me because i ghosted
but why
didnt like myself
im a 32 year old virgin
>old online circle doxxing me because i ghosted
You sound like a slut
I've been immersed in this kind of anonymity for so long since I refuse to tie down my real identity to anything, only an ephemeral alias which has no connection to me. I'm so divorced from the real world it's comical, and it's been sustainable for me which is even worse. My "real" identity feels less genuine than my aliases and it just can't be long term healthy, psychologically.
lil bitch can't handle the Snyper Lyfe
Demoralisation post.
it's just a stupid post
anonymity online is as sensible now as it was when you were 12 and being told not to share shit online
is it really that hard to connect meaningful projects to your real identity and keep everything else anonymous?
>I think you will generally lead a happier and healthier life if you stand 100% behind what you create and say
Yes, obviously. Of course, if you were do that now you will be destroyed for it because years ago you felt for the meme that discrimination is immoral and so now aliens hostile to you live amongst you and your fellow kind. And they will attack you when it's convenient for them to do so, so you cope by trying the impossible task of being invisible detaching yourself from you own actions.
You're a social animal, forever reliant on the work of others for your own work and on the well being of others for you own well being. Always were, always will be. You can fight it, or you can accept that policing who yourself and others associate with, ie keeping your kind clean of outsiders, was never immoral to begin with.
Social Media itself is a bigger cancer than Anonymity.
Return to monke.
>is it worth reading?
maybe if you were living in the 80's
technology has moved along, it takes a lot more to be invisible on the internet these days. also he's a bit of a sensationalist larper.
If his ideas are in a book he ain't invisible.
On another note I just downloaded the Pegasus book, and it's read by a women.... I don't know why this effects me listening to it so much, but I couldn't get through the first 10 minutes.
Read it. Can confirm it's gay and a waste of time. His art of deception book is even gayer. Steer clear of that dead retard's work. Read Michael Bazzell's stuff instead.
Be Kevin Mitcnick, get arrested for hacking 8 different times. Super hacker.
If cyber security and hacking was written for the masses printed like this in physical book form its not even worth ur time and money
Best way to learn is by doing it 🙂 or other cuck methods of reading hacker resource manuals/FAQ from their forums