• TimeSquirrel
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        3611 months ago

        40 years from now when our devices just encode encrypted keys into our brains directly to identify us, we’ll still be making this joke.

          • billwashere
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            711 months ago

            Hey that’s my password!! Get outta my head.

        • @theherk
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          11 months ago

          Damn skippy; as we put on our robes and wizard hats.

          —-

          OMG! Days after I made this post it seems bash.org is no more. End of an era.

        • @eronth
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          511 months ago

          I think we’ll have moved on to hunter3 by then.

    • @[email protected]
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      2711 months ago

      That’s why I only use “*******” for mine. With the number, it’s more secure.

      I guess it works because I can’t see the password.

      • Tiger Jerusalem
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        211 months ago

        That’s it, I’m going to use hunter123456789 now for maximum security!

  • Cyber Yuki
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    3911 months ago

    His password may be ripeadmin, but that admin looked pretty green to me.

    • bruhduh
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      111 months ago

      deleted by creator

  • Shadow
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    11 months ago

    In a post, the security firm said the username and “ridiculously weak” password were harvested by information-stealing malware that had been installed on an Orange computer since September.

    So the password being weak was actually irrelevant here, even if it was 32 random characters they would have pulled it off that pc.

    • @cley_faye
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      711 months ago

      Depending on the attack vector it could also have pulled it out of other things, but that’s exactly why we have 2FA. And I mean real 2FA, on two different channels, that should be harder to compromise simultaneously.

  • @AdamEatsAss
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    1811 months ago

    A far more secure password would have been RipeAdmin1$. Gotta get those capitals, lowercases, numbers, and special characters.

    • @moistclump
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      311 months ago

      Passphrases 14+ characters with upper and lower case, numbers, special characters. Such as r1peAsAm@ang0adm1n!

      At least that’s what John Oliver and Ed Snowden say. I trust Ed on this one.

  • @Nurse_Robot
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    1411 months ago

    Where did the P come from?

    • @[email protected]
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      11 months ago

      A different language: Réseaux IP Européens (or “European IP Networks” in the language of Freedom)

      • billwashere
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        -111 months ago

        So that’s why they’re call Freedom Fries… mystery explained. 🤣

    • Aatube
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      Réseaux IP Européens (European IP Networks)

      The article said that RIPE was one of five Regional Internet Registry, not the one. Big HAL fail

      Also, apparently RIPE NCC (which was hacked) and RIPE are different entities. The former is a Regional Internet Registry, and the latter is a forum hosted by RIPE NCC.

      • @[email protected]
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        111 months ago

        Of the two RIPE actually existed first. RIPE isn’t just a forum, it is the community of European and Middle Eastern IP network operators. It started as coordination meetings of some European operators and grew from there. At some point the RIPE community was large enough that they founded the RIPE Network Coordination Center with full time employees as a sort of secretary role for the community. Later when the RIRs were created to decentralize the management of IP resources that job was assigned to the RIPE NCC for the RIPE region.

        My work place is one of those original European operators and the colleage who represented us at ripe-1 is also still employed, though close to retirement now :-)

    • Camelbeard
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      111 months ago

      The p is for password

  • StarDreamer
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    611 months ago

    according to a detailed writeup of the event by Doug Madory, a BGP expert at security and networking firm Kentik.

    What’s a ”BGP expert”? Most of this stuff is covered in an undergraduate networking course. Wouldn’t just “networking expert” do?

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    311 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Orange España, Spain’s second-biggest mobile operator, suffered a major outage on Wednesday after an unknown party obtained a “ridiculously weak” password and used it to access an account for managing the global routing table that controls which networks deliver the company’s Internet traffic, researchers said.

    The password came to light after the party, using the moniker Snow, posted an image to social media that showed the orange.es email address associated with the RIPE account.

    In a post, the security firm said the username and “ridiculously weak” password were harvested by information-stealing malware that had been installed on an Orange computer since September.

    Once logged into Orange’s RIPE account, Snow made changes to the global routing table the mobile operator relies on to specify what backbone providers are authorized to carry its traffic to various parts of the world.

    All but one of them also originated with the Orange AS, and once again had no effect on traffic, according to a detailed writeup of the event by Doug Madory, a BGP expert at security and networking firm Kentik.

    The creation of the ROA for 149.74.0.0/16 was the first act by Snow to create problems, because the maximum prefix length was set to 16, rendering any smaller routes using the address range invalid


    The original article contains 516 words, the summary contains 211 words. Saved 59%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!