70 comments
klik99 · 4 hours ago
"If you want to try it, be aware that it requires Intel Pentium 166MHz or above."

Made me laugh. Fun article, also really love the genre of "bored smart person goes too deep on something that the end result is obvious by common sense but proving it requires surprising amount of ingenuity and scrappiness"

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MartijnBraam · 3 hours ago
I came across the tweet about this "Evil" dongle and instantly recognized it as the exact same thing I worked on before... It's not evil, it's just annoying.

https://blog.brixit.nl/making-a-usb-ethernet-adapter-work-sr...

In my case I disabled the SPI flash module to have it not appear as a CD drive, the author of this post actually found some documentation about the SPI being optional. Funnily enough this post now also gives you all the tooling to make an actual evil RJ45 dongle by reflashing one :D

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bentcorner · 3 hours ago
I actually really appreciate USB devices that masquerade as a storage device to provide their own drivers. I suppose in this day and age the "right" thing to do is to upload a bunch of stuff to microsoft servers so that it downloads whatever is needed upon getting plugged in, but I've observed enough stuff needing manually installed drivers to know that this isn't as apparently easy as it may appear to be. (For example, I very often need to download vendor-specific ADB drivers)

Anyways, I think it's clever for peripherals to help you bootstrap, and having the drivers baked into the device makes things a little easier instead of trying to find a canonical download source.

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bisrig · 3 hours ago
I'm not sure what the current state of the art is, but for the longest time it was pretty common for USB peripheral ICs to have small flash devices attached to them in order to be able to store VID/PID and other USB config information, so that the device is enumerated correctly when it's plugged in and can be associated with the correct driver etc. And depending on when the device was designed, 512kB might have been the smallest size that was readily available via supply chain. It would not have been strange to use a device like that to store 10s of bytes!

The ISO thing is a little bit weird, but to be honest it's a creative way to try to evade corporate IT security policies restricting mass storage USB devices. I think optical drives use a different device class that probably evades most restrictions, so if you enumerate as a complex device that's a combo optical drive/network adapter, you might be able to install your own driver even on computers where "USB drives" have been locked out!

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JKCalhoun · 27 minutes ago
"It is already possible for an assassin to send someone an e-mail with an innocent-looking attachment. When the receiver downloads the attachment, the electrical current and molecular structure of the central processing unit is altered, causing it to blast apart like a large hand grenade.”

I feel like that might have been what took out a neighbor down the street.

Sorry, I got distracted by the newspaper clipping in the article and had to laugh.