Comments
xenoghost1 t1_j9sdhrn wrote
Russia has more in common with a snake than with a bear.
a bear is a brave and solitary creature that can endure with patience the winter. Russia on the other hand is a slithering creep, that lives of attacking thing smaller than them and trying to poison things larger than themselves. cowardly, weak and unable to survive without direct sunlight to aid them with their body temperature. this an attitude reflected by all those loyal to the ghoulish cabal we politely call the Kremlin.
Clever_Bee34919 t1_j9sstnd wrote
Wjat do you have against snakes? Those poor snakes, being compared to Russia.
zipzoupzwoop t1_j9sx8o6 wrote
You know, the whole forbidden fruit thing really put them in a bad light. Time for an anti-ophidophobia campaign?
Clever_Bee34919 t1_j9sxfa4 wrote
YES!. Sign me up to the "snakes are cool" club immediately
420ipblood t1_j9t72g6 wrote
It requires acknowledging that while you think they're cool, absolutely no one thinks the "snake guy" in the neighborhood is cool.
YukesMusic t1_j9t90b3 wrote
Tunnel Snakes Rule!
Clever_Bee34919 t1_j9t8440 wrote
I never was cool though... so I don't care
Occma t1_j9t8so9 wrote
bears are not brave tho. They are just the apex predator. You cannot be brave if you never faced a stronger opponent.
xenoghost1 t1_j9ue6tk wrote
don't know, maybe they understand what a gun is and they'll still rush you.
Occma t1_j9xktzq wrote
no, one severel levels
daniel_22sss t1_j9tbfc0 wrote
Snakes are competent killers. Russia is not competent in anything.
There is no animal that represents how shitty they are.
[deleted] t1_j9r39ao wrote
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MarieOak2021 t1_j9riew7 wrote
The rest of the world needs to hack Russia out of existence.
debacol t1_j9s8tsn wrote
Seriously. Hack them so categorically they have to go back to fax machines and checkbooks.
jarlvk t1_j9snyaj wrote
If only Google, MS and Apple would invalidate moscovian licences.
EagleCatchingFish t1_j9ta3oc wrote
Clippy: It looks like you're trying to write a nuclear threat, blyat.
MidianFootbridge69 t1_j9sjtxj wrote
I totally agree.
It really is time to return the favor.
[deleted] t1_j9rm1lw wrote
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Clever_Bee34919 t1_j9sswtr wrote
With axes?
wwbbs2008 t1_j9tamvj wrote
This is some Mad Magazine Spy vs Spy level shit. /s
Seriously this is not exactly new and we may see event such as the 1982 explosion happening more. https://www.risidata.com/Database/Detail/cia-trojan-causes-siberian-gas-pipeline-explosion
User767676 t1_j9r28b0 wrote
It’s going to get loose in other countries now. Malware isn’t a fire a forget thing.
MagnusCaseus t1_j9road1 wrote
It will be interesting to see how warfare will be conducted between nations with strong military, and strong computing capabilities, especially with how much more technology has been integrated into our daily lives, and structure. Take Canada for example, last year a bad BGP update caused a nationwide communications outage for those using Rogers (because for some reason our government won't do anything about our ISP oligarchy, and we practically get only 3 choices for internet providers). That outage even though it lasted a day impacted so many people, and affected many core services like hospitals, and effected many businesses. That through accident too, I can only imagine what intentionally attacks on national IT infrastructure would be like, and how much chaos it would cause.
MercMcNasty t1_j9sge3q wrote
I read a book when I was a kid about children fighting a war with like holographic soldiers on a board in front of them and the closer your finger got to the hologram the more control they had or something like that
autotldr t1_j9qvsds wrote
This is the best tl;dr I could make, original reduced by 73%. (I'm a bot)
> Ahead of the one-year anniversary of Russia's invasion, cybersecurity researchers at Slovakian cybersecurity firm ESET, network security firm Fortinet, and Google-owned incident-response firm Mandiant have all independently found that in 2022, Ukraine saw far more specimens of "Wiper" malware than in any previous year of Russia's long-running cyberwar targeting Ukraine-or, for that matter, any other year, anywhere.
> "It's an explosion, another order of magnitude." That variety, researchers say, may be a sign of the sheer number of malware developers whom Russia has assigned to target Ukraine, or of Russia's efforts to build new variants that can stay ahead of Ukraine's detection tools, particularly as Ukraine has hardened its cybersecurity defenses.
> Fortinet has also found that the growing volume of wiper malware specimens hitting Ukraine may in fact be creating a more global proliferation problem.
Extended Summary | FAQ | Feedback | Top keywords: Ukraine^#1 malware^#2 Russia^#3 Wiper^#4 year^#5
hissnspit t1_j9sgdzs wrote
I don't understand why Russia has not been geofenced already. There's almost no reason for any person or organization in western world to have traffic flowing to/from Russia. Just cut them off completely from the internet. Along with their buddies - N. Korea, Iran and Syria.
Puzzled-Collection-5 t1_j9sjn78 wrote
Same reasons why murderers get fair lawyers sponsored by the Government in trials, internet usage is Human Right and this won't help but reinforce the idea of the existental threat that Russia is making up for average Russians.
hissnspit t1_j9stcrl wrote
Fine, but allow it at individual level. I want my home router to filter out all Russian traffic completely. I don't give a fuck about internet fair laws and such - I just want Russia blocked out of my home.
Tomas0Bob t1_j9swuaf wrote
You can do that for yourself but it's really easy to get around. All they'd need to do is just route through another country like Georgia or India, and whoops now it's no longer coming from Russia
zipzoupzwoop t1_j9sxg0j wrote
So they should be geofenced then. "The internet is a human right" doesn't really apply when the country already blocks the parts of the internet they don't want their people to see. I believe not getting hacked by governmental stooges to be a human right.
Tomas0Bob t1_j9tinrc wrote
Geofencing would be very difficult and likely affect only the less tech-savvy public. You'd never be able to convince every neighboring country like China, Kazakhstan, Georgia to hard cut off Russian network connections and as long as they have another country to route through they can get around it. Probably not your everyday layman but everyone else with a little bit of knowhow let alone any government agency.
Dicond t1_j9t2ki9 wrote
Poor analogy. People get a defense attorney and fair trials in the US (as an example) and other free and fair countries because it is the right of a citizen. These are not citizens and are thus not subject to that rule.
Also, "internet usage is a human right" isn't written into law pretty much anywhere. Hell, there are very rural places in the US today that don't have reliable internet. Disallowing access to prominent, US based cites is perfectly within the bounds of a country, especially against a warmongering nation like Russia who refuses to exist under the confines of International convention and law.
Puzzled-Collection-5 t1_ja2tm6i wrote
> Poor analogy Proceeds to get on my analogy (because your first sentence is confusing, please define it better) level ignoring he asked me to explain on a level he can understand Also Russia is blocking it themselves so lol
Phssthp0kThePak t1_j9sig6v wrote
I've been saying every fiber optic cable from the West into Russia should have been cut since Litvinenko was assassinated in London.
OtherUnameInShop t1_j9segn2 wrote
Return the favor?
zipzoupzwoop t1_j9sxin2 wrote
Could they maybe use this to wipe my internet history from my ISPs instead?
Skaindire t1_j9tmwmm wrote
Just imagine, a bunch of neckbeards desperate to show their worth, lest they get drafted ...
[deleted] t1_j9qyul4 wrote
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[deleted] t1_j9se0ny wrote
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AndrekinKimawa t1_j9srch4 wrote
China is russian ally in there I guess.
DJ3XO t1_j9skpo5 wrote
Kind of irrelevant to the article, but does anyone have a high res of the picture used at the start of it?
wart365 t1_j9rpyzb wrote
All the more reasons proving that Windows is depreciated, almost defunct technology that is kept alive solely through bureaucracy not knowing how to adopt a non-Windows system. Certainly -nix based systems can be hacked, but it's not an open door like Windows usually is. It is plausible to lock down Windows, and W11 is built specifically to do this, but it's still more vulnerable than a comparable -nix setup.
h0nkee t1_j9rxcqu wrote
Anything worth hacking on this scale is going to be *nix anyway. Not much of the world runs on Windows when it comes to important things.
instantnet t1_j9s41qn wrote
No one is going to hack your sweet Gameboy classic
Aegis617 t1_j9r0eqr wrote
I know a woman in the us involved in charity work that has helped Ukraine and they even tried hacking her. And they weren't even a large donor nor solely for Ukraine.