Bigoldmustard ,

I spent 12 hours once downloading a limp bizkit song on dial up and it wasn’t even a limp bizkit song. I feel nostalgic for that kind of deception. It feels so quaint.

Raykin ,

Whoa. I hope it was my fake Limp Bizkit song because a couple friends and I actually did this around 2000.

MeDuViNoX ,
@MeDuViNoX@sh.itjust.works avatar

What was it really?

Raykin ,

A shitty spoof we made about hot pockets. We listed it on Napster or Limewire as a bootleg.

ohlaph ,

Thank you.

rickyrigatoni ,
@rickyrigatoni@lemm.ee avatar

My fellow americans, I would once again like to say I did not have sexual relations with that woman.

Churbleyimyam ,

Lol I remember this kind of thing happening

Lojcs ,

It was considered best practice to never install anything

In what universe? You might as well never turn on your computer.

TrickDacy ,

Yeah this post makes a good point but sounds a little like the writer did not experience what they claim to. WeatherBug was buggy slow bullshit and everyone installed it anyway. it was only people who noticed details who saw how sluggish it made your PC. To this day I've never heard a single person talk about it getting your location being a problem, until now. That's a good point I guess but I just don't think it was on many people's radars.

MeDuViNoX ,
@MeDuViNoX@sh.itjust.works avatar

I installed all kinds of stuff, but the metric was if it slowed down my PC or especially my games. That'd get me to uninstall, run antivirus and/or anti-malware, or even totally reinstall Windows real quick.

TrickDacy ,

Exactly! We weren't yet used to companies spying on us and computers were on the slow side anyhow

Grandwolf319 ,

Yeah, I would install anything that just used 0 resources when it’s not running. But that’s not what malware does

Reucnalts ,

In this universe. I didnt want to have 10 fucking different toolbars for my browser. You had to see the correct download button, so that you get your wanted download plus malware/viruses. If you got the wrong you got a lot of malware xD

Huschke ,

It really feels like the OP didn't have older people in their life with browsers with 3 or more toolbars that you had to service every other month. 😅

People clicked yes to everything. Just like they do now. Nothing has changed.

Grandwolf319 ,

Before clicking yes just meant ruining your sandbox which was your computer. You can’t just have a bad PC today, instead you get your data leaked and become a target for scams.

Aux ,

3? More like 33!

SteefLem ,
@SteefLem@lemmy.world avatar

I think i read somewhere that the cia said they dont install bugs anymore because now ppl do that themselfs.

T156 ,

It's also a lot easier to do it in software, since you don't need to splice wires and leave physical traces like you would have had to do in the day.

A well-configured charger or Flash drive can do that job for you, and can spread itself.

oce ,
@oce@jlai.lu avatar

USB charger ?

T156 ,

Yes, since most modern chargers and cables have internal chips to communicate capabilities with for things like fast-charging. It is not difficult to have the chip identify itself as something else, and execute a payload.

A common attack method is to have it show up as a keyboard, and execute a series of key-sequences when connected to a computer (like opening and executing things through a command prompt).

It is also why you should try and avoid plugging random USB cables/chargers into your phone/computer when out and about, since you don't exactly know if the other end is what it appears to be.

Empricorn ,

I don't know enough about the charger thing to comment on how viable that might be for an attack vector.

But you're definitely right about plugging your mobile device into random ports. Either set your phone to by default only charge and not communicate, use a charge-only cable, or only use your own power bank/charger when away from home and you don't fully trust where you are...

Mostly_Gristle ,

Yeah, I've read a bunch of articles over the last few years about how a lot of law enforcement agencies are finding that instead of getting a warrant and doing a bunch of surveillance they can just buy people's private data from a data broker and get more info than they would have been able, or allowed, to gather if they'd gotten the warrant.

Grandwolf319 ,

So I’m pretty averse to getting new apps and giving them location permissions.

Just cause of this comment I went it and looked at the location permissions, holy shit so many apps had it that shouldn’t have. Like Apple home… wtf does it need location for, it uses wifi…

WhatIsThePointAnyway ,

De-centralization and open source was always the better way. Technology started on this path and the corporate powers have done everything they can to sabotage and destroy open tech.

CitizenKong ,

Been this way with every new tech I reckon. See also DVD burners and DRM/regional codes.

Aux , (edited )

Yeah, I find it funny that people don't remember DVD DRM. I guess it wasn't noticeable to Americans, but you move from Latvia to the UK and suddenly all your movies are duds. You can at least use a VPN today to circumvent this bull shit in many cases, no such luck back then.

P.S. What was even worse for people living in xUSSR countries is that part of DVDs came from Russia (region 5) and part came from Europe (zone 2, because many xUSSR countries were assigned zone 2). The same was true for DVD players. So it was always a puzzle what to buy. Fuck this shit.

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