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    • O
      oyaji
      last edited by oyaji

      How come that here in “The Official fuck Windows 11/Microsoft Thread”, everybody but me has downloaded it?

      In that case, shouldn’t the thread really be called something more appropriate, like “The Official I Got Fuckt by Windows 11/Microsoft and Bill Gates Love Me Long Time ITB Thread”?

      © 2015 - 2025 oyaji

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • LithuL
        Lithu
        last edited by

        I’ll need to build a new PC because of this. This PC was built years ago and still plays any game I load into it. I asked Gpt for recommendations and it gave me a RTX 5090 as a reasonable choice…$2500k. How much is high end $10k!?!

        Gators1G 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • Gators1G
          Gators1 @Lithu
          last edited by

          @Lithu said in The Official fuck Windows 11/Microsoft Thread:

          I’ll need to build a new PC because of this. This PC was built years ago and still plays any game I load into it. I asked Gpt for recommendations and it gave me a RTX 5090 as a reasonable choice…$2500k. How much is high end $10k!?!

          I agree with @Gpt . Helicopter explosions are a hard thing for low-end graphic cards to render.

          alt text

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
          • TazzT
            Tazz
            last edited by

            Not just NSA…

            Billions of Calls Exposed Via Unencrypted Satellites

            The Discovery: Researchers used $800 consumer satellite equipment to intercept sensitive unencrypted data from geosynchronous satellites, including military communications, personal calls, and corporate data across 40% of Earth’s surface.
            Why It Matters: The vulnerability threatens privacy of millions, compromises critical infrastructure, and exposes military operations. Major companies like T-Mobile have responded with encryption, while others remain at risk.

            djohnson  /  Oct 14  /  Government

            Researchers find a startlingly cheap way to steal your secrets from space

            Researchers find a startlingly cheap way to steal your secrets from space

            Using commercially available equipment, researchers scanned 39 satellites and observed sensitive, encrypted communications from telecoms, businesses and the U.S. military.

            GTFO

            Gators1G 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • B
              Blanks
              last edited by Blanks

              Reminds me of that time during a US war game in Europe, the bad guy side tracked troop movements by using Tinder. People are so accustomed to using devices that opsec goes out the window.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • GustafG
                Gustaf
                last edited by

                So, commies use Tinder?

                "Let's give it a week! Still a disaster? Let's give it another week…" -Tazz

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • Gators1G
                  Gators1 @Tazz
                  last edited by

                  @Tazz said in The Official fuck Windows 11/Microsoft Thread:

                  Not just NSA…

                  Billions of Calls Exposed Via Unencrypted Satellites

                  The Discovery: Researchers used $800 consumer satellite equipment to intercept sensitive unencrypted data from geosynchronous satellites, including military communications, personal calls, and corporate data across 40% of Earth’s surface.
                  Why It Matters: The vulnerability threatens privacy of millions, compromises critical infrastructure, and exposes military operations. Major companies like T-Mobile have responded with encryption, while others remain at risk.

                  djohnson  /  Oct 14  /  Government

                  Researchers find a startlingly cheap way to steal your secrets from space

                  Researchers find a startlingly cheap way to steal your secrets from space

                  Using commercially available equipment, researchers scanned 39 satellites and observed sensitive, encrypted communications from telecoms, businesses and the U.S. military.

                  Satellites don’t encrypt, devices using them encrypt. If you stuck encryption on a satellite, then you would be stuck with that for the lifespan of the constellation. If you do it on the ground then you can update it over the years that the constellation is active.

                  alt text

                  JamJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                  • JamJ
                    Jam @Gators1
                    last edited by

                    @Gators1 said in The Official fuck Windows 11/Microsoft Thread:

                    @Tazz said in The Official fuck Windows 11/Microsoft Thread:

                    Not just NSA…

                    Billions of Calls Exposed Via Unencrypted Satellites

                    The Discovery: Researchers used $800 consumer satellite equipment to intercept sensitive unencrypted data from geosynchronous satellites, including military communications, personal calls, and corporate data across 40% of Earth’s surface.
                    Why It Matters: The vulnerability threatens privacy of millions, compromises critical infrastructure, and exposes military operations. Major companies like T-Mobile have responded with encryption, while others remain at risk.

                    djohnson  /  Oct 14  /  Government

                    Researchers find a startlingly cheap way to steal your secrets from space

                    Researchers find a startlingly cheap way to steal your secrets from space

                    Using commercially available equipment, researchers scanned 39 satellites and observed sensitive, encrypted communications from telecoms, businesses and the U.S. military.

                    Satellites don’t encrypt, devices using them encrypt. If you stuck encryption on a satellite, then you would be stuck with that for the lifespan of the constellation. If you do it on the ground then you can update it over the years that the constellation is active.

                    Makes sense to encrypt/decrypt on the ground where a combination of software and hardware techniques may be employed, but it also should be possible to upload software for an extra level of encryption in orbit.

                    "laissez les bons temps rouler!"

                    Gators1G 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • TazzT
                      Tazz
                      last edited by

                      It was my understanding that the satellite is just a repeater that can handle many connections.

                      GTFO

                      GustafG Gators1G 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 2
                      • O
                        oyaji
                        last edited by

                        Mine too.

                        © 2015 - 2025 oyaji

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • Gators1G
                          Gators1 @Jam
                          last edited by

                          @Jam said in The Official fuck Windows 11/Microsoft Thread:

                          @Gators1 said in The Official fuck Windows 11/Microsoft Thread:

                          @Tazz said in The Official fuck Windows 11/Microsoft Thread:

                          Not just NSA…

                          Billions of Calls Exposed Via Unencrypted Satellites

                          The Discovery: Researchers used $800 consumer satellite equipment to intercept sensitive unencrypted data from geosynchronous satellites, including military communications, personal calls, and corporate data across 40% of Earth’s surface.
                          Why It Matters: The vulnerability threatens privacy of millions, compromises critical infrastructure, and exposes military operations. Major companies like T-Mobile have responded with encryption, while others remain at risk.

                          djohnson  /  Oct 14  /  Government

                          Researchers find a startlingly cheap way to steal your secrets from space

                          Researchers find a startlingly cheap way to steal your secrets from space

                          Using commercially available equipment, researchers scanned 39 satellites and observed sensitive, encrypted communications from telecoms, businesses and the U.S. military.

                          Satellites don’t encrypt, devices using them encrypt. If you stuck encryption on a satellite, then you would be stuck with that for the lifespan of the constellation. If you do it on the ground then you can update it over the years that the constellation is active.

                          Makes sense to encrypt/decrypt on the ground where a combination of software and hardware techniques may be employed, but it also should be possible to upload software for an extra level of encryption in orbit.

                          You could, but why would you need to double encrypt something? And it’s still vulnerable from the ground to the satellite if you wait to encrypt it in the sky. The device is just a radio that others can pick up when nearby.

                          alt text

                          JamJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • JamJ
                            Jam @Gators1
                            last edited by

                            @Gators1 said in The Official fuck Windows 11/Microsoft Thread:

                            @Jam said in The Official fuck Windows 11/Microsoft Thread:

                            @Gators1 said in The Official fuck Windows 11/Microsoft Thread:

                            @Tazz said in The Official fuck Windows 11/Microsoft Thread:

                            Not just NSA…

                            Billions of Calls Exposed Via Unencrypted Satellites

                            The Discovery: Researchers used $800 consumer satellite equipment to intercept sensitive unencrypted data from geosynchronous satellites, including military communications, personal calls, and corporate data across 40% of Earth’s surface.
                            Why It Matters: The vulnerability threatens privacy of millions, compromises critical infrastructure, and exposes military operations. Major companies like T-Mobile have responded with encryption, while others remain at risk.

                            djohnson  /  Oct 14  /  Government

                            Researchers find a startlingly cheap way to steal your secrets from space

                            Researchers find a startlingly cheap way to steal your secrets from space

                            Using commercially available equipment, researchers scanned 39 satellites and observed sensitive, encrypted communications from telecoms, businesses and the U.S. military.

                            Satellites don’t encrypt, devices using them encrypt. If you stuck encryption on a satellite, then you would be stuck with that for the lifespan of the constellation. If you do it on the ground then you can update it over the years that the constellation is active.

                            Makes sense to encrypt/decrypt on the ground where a combination of software and hardware techniques may be employed, but it also should be possible to upload software for an extra level of encryption in orbit.

                            You could, but why would you need to double encrypt something? And it’s still vulnerable from the ground to the satellite if you wait to encrypt it in the sky. The device is just a radio that others can pick up when nearby.

                            I think we agree.

                            I just meant to add that one can do both.

                            The encryption scheme local to the radio can be outside the radio and provide an additional layer.

                            But . . .

                            It’s probably unnecessary.

                            "laissez les bons temps rouler!"

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • GustafG
                              Gustaf @Tazz
                              last edited by

                              @Tazz said in The Official fuck Windows 11/Microsoft Thread:

                              It was my understanding that the satellite is just a repeater that can handle many connections.

                              Your sister can handle many connections!

                              "Let's give it a week! Still a disaster? Let's give it another week…" -Tazz

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                              • TazzT
                                Tazz
                                last edited by

                                image.png

                                GTFO

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                                • Gators1G
                                  Gators1 @Tazz
                                  last edited by

                                  @Tazz said in The Official fuck Windows 11/Microsoft Thread:

                                  It was my understanding that the satellite is just a repeater that can handle many connections.

                                  Basically yes. We have some encrypted traffic and some that’s not, but it’s up to the customer to enable that. The article was a bit weird talking about Tmobile texts that it said were unencrypted, but then later was talking about the metadata only. Usually the payload (message) would be encrypted if the customer wanted, but there is a wrapper of metadata that the satellite adds in plain text. They should be able to see like the device ID (IMEI or sim) and some other info, but at least on our network it’s obfuscated through algorithms.

                                  Also they were looking at geostationary constellations, which in theory you could monitor from a certain location, but it’s a bit harder for LEO constellations because the satellite is moving and handing off traffic as satellites move in and out of the region. Something like Starlink would be nearly impossible because you don’t know which of the thousands of satellites is connected to the device you want to monitor at any point in time. At least dozens are over a user at any point in time.

                                  I saw a story a while back about some old Navy communication satellites launched in the 70s or 80s that are basically repeaters and anybody can connect to them. It’s illegal to do that here, but in Brazil they don’t give a fuck about our laws so truckers or people in remote areas use them to call their friends and family. You can pick up the traffic on ham radios.

                                  alt text

                                  JamJ TazzT 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                  • JamJ
                                    Jam @Gators1
                                    last edited by Jam

                                    @Gators1

                                    This came as a shock to me:

                                    As of October 2025, there are approximately 8,475 Starlink satellites in orbit, with plans for up to 42,000 in the future. These satellites are part of SpaceX’s effort to provide global internet coverage.

                                    It stands to reason that there’d be a lot of them, but 8,500 headed to 42,000 was a surprise.

                                    Radio amateurs:

                                    https://hamradioprep.com/ham-radio-satellites/

                                    I remember the firs OSCAR which simply orbited the earth sending out HI in Morse code.

                                    … (another .) … (minus one .)

                                    Fucking forum only allows three of the same characters in a row, followed by either one “.” or “…” but not just two fucking dots!

                                    dit dit dit dit, dit dit

                                    "laissez les bons temps rouler!"

                                    TazzT Gators1G 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • TazzT
                                      Tazz @Gators1
                                      last edited by

                                      @Gators1 yeah,a few years ago i saw a guy in Galveston with a hand held antenna pointed out high over the Gulf and a heasdset. He way probably monitoring some drug trafficking conversation.

                                      Do they still use the prick (PRC) 117? I’ve seen those as portable units as well as installed in planes.

                                      GTFO

                                      Gators1G 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • TazzT
                                        Tazz @Jam
                                        last edited by

                                        @Jam said in The Official fuck Windows 11/Microsoft Thread:

                                        @Gators1

                                        This came as a shock to me:

                                        As of October 2025, there are approximately 8,475 Starlink satellites in orbit, with plans for up to 42,000 in the future. These satellites are part of SpaceX’s effort to provide global internet coverage.

                                        It stands to reason that there’d be a lot of them, but 8,500 headed to 42,000 was a surprise.

                                        Radio amateurs:

                                        https://hamradioprep.com/ham-radio-satellites/

                                        I remember the firs OSCAR which simply orbited the earth sending out HI in Morse code.

                                        … (another .) … (minus one .)

                                        Fucking forum only allows three of the same characters in a row, followed by either one “.” or “…” but not just two fucking dots!

                                        dit dit dit dit, dit dit

                                        And Starlink has some competition from Amazon.

                                        Amazon’s satellite communication initiative is Project Kuiper, a low Earth orbit (LEO) constellation of over 3,200 satellites designed to provide fast, low-latency internet service globally. The project uses advanced communications payloads, including optical inter-satellite links (OISLs) for high-speed data transfer between spacecraft, and has begun a series of launches to deploy its initial constellation. While the full service launch is pending the deployment of more satellites, Amazon is working to become a competitor to existing satellite internet providers like Starlink.

                                        GTFO

                                        Gators1G 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • Gators1G
                                          Gators1 @Jam
                                          last edited by

                                          @Jam said in The Official fuck Windows 11/Microsoft Thread:

                                          @Gators1

                                          This came as a shock to me:

                                          As of October 2025, there are approximately 8,475 Starlink satellites in orbit, with plans for up to 42,000 in the future. These satellites are part of SpaceX’s effort to provide global internet coverage.

                                          It stands to reason that there’d be a lot of them, but 8,500 headed to 42,000 was a surprise.

                                          Radio amateurs:

                                          https://hamradioprep.com/ham-radio-satellites/

                                          I remember the firs OSCAR which simply orbited the earth sending out HI in Morse code.

                                          … (another .) … (minus one .)

                                          Fucking forum only allows three of the same characters in a row, followed by either one “.” or “…” but not just two fucking dots!

                                          dit dit dit dit, dit dit

                                          Yeah, it’s all basically to increase the capacity available like with cellphones. Once they started doing broadband over cellphones, the existing towers got saturated and people were dropping connections. There was a mad dash to add more towers in places like NYC to support the traffic. The amount of spectrum you own limits the amount of bandwidth in a certain area, so to get more you build more towers closer together and turn down the power so you can serve more customers. Same deal in space, the more satellites you have, the more data you can push out of a particular area. Since SpaceX is covering large areas and doing broadband over satellite, they need a lot of them.

                                          alt text

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • JamJ
                                            Jam
                                            last edited by Jam

                                            There is a practical limit to the amount of traffic a single satellite may provide so It’s easy to see that thousands will be/are needed and this helps to the system less vulnerable to sudden destruction as well.

                                            Decentralization FTW!

                                            Here are specs on the AN/PRC 117(F):

                                            www.alldatasheet.com

                                            ANPRC-117F datasheet(1/2 Pages) HARRIS

                                            ANPRC-117F datasheet(1/2 Pages) HARRIS

                                            The Harris AN/PRC-117F(C) multiband, multimission, manpack radiois an advanced software-defined radio covering the entire 30 to 512MHz frequency spectrum, providing the warfighter with unsurpassedbattle-proven communications technology.The AN/PRC-117F(C) has embedded Communications Security(COMSEC)...

                                            The Chinese are making knock-offs which are available on Ebay and in other places.

                                            I would suppose encryption capabilities are not included.

                                            "laissez les bons temps rouler!"

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