• @[email protected]
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    127 months ago

    Probably wiping process control code from the systems that contain tons of fiddly hard to find constants and other information.

    • @[email protected]
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      117 months ago

      Well that’s less fun than detcord or mission impossible style self-immolating electronics.

      • aname
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        57 months ago

        Yes, but Taiwan is not China and they need to be able to do that even if there are people in the building.

    • KillingTimeItself
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      37 months ago

      i wonder if this also includes trying to physically damage the machinery in order to ensure one hell of a time getting it back online, because theoretically once you wipe it, you can just start smashing shit together that shouldn’t be smashed together lol.

      • @Jimmyeatsausage
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        37 months ago

        What would be better is polluting the software with invalid but still plausible constraints, so the chips would seem OK and might work for days or weeks but would fail in the field… especially if these chips are used in weapon systems or critical infrastructure.

        • KillingTimeItself
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          27 months ago

          this is, decent. The problem here is that it’s almost always easier to reverse engineer a system that’s partially constructed, than it is one that’s completely deconstructed.

          You would ideally want to delete ALL software, and ALL hardware running that software, that would be MUCH harder to reverse engineer. Or at the very least, significantly more expensive.

          although i imagine building chips to fail is almost an impossible thing. Cpus almost never die, unless you blow them up with too much power lol.