Hacking your PC using your speaker without ever touching it
from blog.nns.ee
25
by
xx_ns
31m ago
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Article:
33 min
The article discusses the discovery of vulnerabilities in Creative Sound Blaster Katana V2X's firmware that allow attackers within 15 meters to turn it into a covert spying tool and Rubber Ducky without ever pairing or physically touching the device. The author details reverse engineering efforts, firmware analysis, and the implications for security.
This discovery could lead to increased awareness of security vulnerabilities in consumer electronics, prompting manufacturers to improve firmware protection mechanisms. It also highlights the importance of secure communication protocols and authentication methods in IoT devices.
- The speaker uses a proprietary protocol called CTP for communication.
- CTP authentication is required before sending commands, but no protection exists for flashing firmwares.
- Bluetooth functionality bridges the internal CTP handler to both USB and Bluetooth, allowing unauthorized access.
- Firmware patches were created to exploit vulnerabilities and turn the device into a covert monitoring tool or Rubber Ducky.
Quality:
The article provides detailed technical information and analysis without sensationalizing the issue.
Discussion (3):
The comment thread discusses a security issue related to firmware writing and the vendor's response, expressing anticipation for a YouTube video on the topic, praise for content, and criticism of companies ignoring such issues.
- companies ignore serious security issues
Security
Cybersecurity, Firmware Analysis
Show HN: Edsger – A handwritten Clojure REPL for the reMarkable 2
from handwritten.danieljanus.pl
75
by
nathell
16h ago
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Article:
The article introduces Edsger, a new Clojure REPL designed for use on the reMarkable 2 tablet. It includes links to read the transcript of the post and comment on it.
- Edsger is a new Clojure REPL
Discussion (16):
2 min
The comment thread discusses the Remarkable device's capabilities, particularly in SSH access and displaying content, with a focus on technical aspects of software development for e-paper devices. Opinions vary on practicality, while some users express enthusiasm about new features.
- It's fun to do
- Practicality is subjective
Counterarguments:
- It takes multiple seconds to save notes
- Need for specific file formats
Software Development
Programming Languages, Hardware (reMarkable 2)
Every Byte Matters
from fzakaria.com
8
by
ingve
20m ago
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Article:
26 min
The article discusses how understanding hardware specifics like cache line sizes and CPU core structures can significantly impact performance in programming, particularly when dealing with large data structures or arrays of structs. It provides insights into optimizing memory access patterns for better efficiency.
This article could influence software development practices, leading to more efficient code and potentially reducing resource consumption in computing systems.
- Comparison between Array of Structs (SoA) and Struct of Arrays (SoA)
- Benefits of SoA layout for improved cache utilization
Discussion (0):
More comments needed for analysis.
Computer Science
Software Development, Computer Vision
1-Click GitHub Token Stealing via a VSCode Bug
from blog.ammaraskar.com
460
by
ammar2
19h ago
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Article:
29 min
This article discusses a critical vulnerability in GitHub's web-based Visual Studio Code editor, which allows attackers to steal GitHub tokens by clicking a link. The token can read and write to private repositories. The article provides technical details about the bug, its impact on security, and potential solutions for users.
This vulnerability could lead to unauthorized access to sensitive data in private repositories, potentially compromising user privacy and security within the software development community.
- Tokens have full access to private repositories.
- Solution: Clear cookies and local site data for github.dev.
Quality:
The article provides clear technical details and solutions, maintaining a neutral tone.
Discussion (67):
11 min
The comment thread discusses various aspects of VS Code security, including the researcher's efforts in raising awareness and vendor response issues with MSRC. There is a focus on improving GitHub.dev security practices and alternative tools like Zed and Neovim.
- Vendor response and acknowledgment of reported vulnerabilities is lacking.
- Improvements to GitHub.dev security practices are necessary.
Counterarguments:
- Some argue that the MSRC's handling of vulnerability reports is not necessarily a problem with compensation but rather internal communication issues within Microsoft.
Security
Cybersecurity, Vulnerabilities, Authentication
Mathematicians issue warning as AI rapidly gains ground
from science.org
13
by
pseudolus
1h ago
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Article:
4 min
Mathematicians have issued a warning about the rapid advancement of artificial intelligence (AI) and its potential impact on their discipline's practices and values. The 11-page Leiden Declaration outlines principles for using AI in ways that support mathematics, emphasizing the importance of creativity, understanding, collaboration, and knowledge pursuit.
AI-generated papers could potentially overwhelm peer-review systems with low-quality work, making it difficult to assign proper credit for discoveries, and disadvantage researchers who choose not to rely on AI tools.
- AI is rapidly gaining ground and has already solved a famous conjecture.
- Mathematics is seen as more than just a tool for producing correct answers, emphasizing human values like creativity and understanding.
Quality:
The article provides a balanced view of the AI's impact on mathematics, citing both positive and negative aspects.
Discussion (3):
The comment thread discusses the role of AI in mathematical modeling, emphasizing its potential benefits and critiques regarding the importance of correct answers. It also touches on opinions about science funding, highlighting both its utility and broader motivations.
- AI might improve average corporate mathematical modeling
Counterarguments:
- Mathematics is more than just a machine for producing correct answers
- Science funding isn't solely about jobs for nerds
Science
Mathematics, Artificial Intelligence
Show HN: I reverse-engineered the world maps of Test Drive III (1990 DOS game)
from github.com/s-macke
119
by
s-macke
3d ago
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Article:
6 min
An individual has successfully reverse-engineered the world maps from the 1990 DOS game Test Drive III, aiming to recreate them as accurately as possible. The project utilizes AI for reconstruction and includes a variety of tools for viewing, exporting, and analyzing the extracted data.
- Kid's interest in exploration over racing
- Accuracy of map reconstruction
- Use of AI for project assistance
Quality:
The article provides clear and detailed information about the project, its tools, and the process involved.
Discussion (31):
4 min
The comment thread discusses the nostalgia for classic racing games like Test Drive III and Stunts, with a focus on modernized ports and AI recreation. There is appreciation for reverse engineering efforts but also criticism regarding the quality and accessibility of the project.
Game Development
Reverse Engineering, Game Data Extraction
Use your Nvidia GPU's VRAM as swap space on Linux
from github.com/c0dejedi
337
by
tanelpoder
12h ago
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Article:
7 min
This article explains how to utilize Nvidia GPU VRAM as swap space on Linux, providing a solution for laptops with soldered memory and no upgrade path. It involves using the NBD protocol over a Unix socket to allocate VRAM via CUDA driver API, serving it as a block device, and integrating it into the kernel's built-in nbd driver.
This solution can potentially improve the performance of laptops with limited memory resources, leading to better user experience and more efficient use of hardware components.
- Allocates 7 GB of VRAM as swap space, resulting in a total addressable memory of ~46 GB.
- Works on RTX 3070 Laptop (GA104M) with driver version 580.159.03 and kernel version 6.17.
- No need for a kernel module or NVIDIA kernel symbols, surviving updates without rebuilding anything.
Discussion (88):
14 min
The comment thread discusses the idea of utilizing VRAM for swap space, particularly in laptops with limited RAM and Nvidia GPUs. Participants debate its practicality, efficiency, and potential performance implications, with some suggesting previous implementations have faced limitations or issues related to drivers and compatibility.
- VRAM can be used more efficiently for swap space
- Complex implementation may not provide significant performance benefits
Counterarguments:
- The concept has been explored before, but it may not be practical due to technical constraints.
Computer Science
Operating Systems, Hardware
MAI-Code-1-Flash
from microsoft.ai
480
by
EvanZhouDev
16h ago
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Article:
Microsoft's MAI-Code-1-Flash is a sophisticated AI tool designed for coding tasks that can reason through complex problems and execute multi-step workflows autonomously. It supports various programming languages and integrates well with GitHub Copilot in Visual Studio Code, aiming to enhance productivity by reducing debugging time.
AI tools like MAI-Code-1-Flash have the potential to significantly enhance productivity in software development by automating complex coding tasks, which could lead to faster project completion and higher quality code. However, they might also raise concerns about job displacement for developers.
- Agentic execution across multi-step workflows
- Supports a wide range of programming languages and ecosystems
- Custom-trained for native VS Code integration with GitHub Copilot
Quality:
The article provides clear and concise information about the AI tool, with a focus on its features and benefits.
Discussion (217):
35 min
The comment thread discusses a new MAI model, comparing it to existing models like Haiku and Qwen, focusing on its performance in coding tasks. Opinions vary regarding the model's efficiency and competitiveness with other smaller models.
- The model competes with Haiku but performs similarly to Qwen3.6-35B-A3B
- The model is suitable for daily, low-effort tasks
Counterarguments:
- The model does not outperform larger models significantly
- There are better alternatives available for coding tasks
Artificial Intelligence
AI Tools, Programming Assistance
AI outperforms law professors in Stanford Law study
from law.stanford.edu
275
by
berlianta
11h ago
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Article:
8 min
Stanford Law School Professor Julian Nyarko led a groundbreaking study showing that law professors prefer AI-generated answers to student questions over responses written by their fellow instructors in nearly 3,000 comparisons.
AI could reshape how legal education is delivered, potentially enhancing access to expert guidance while raising concerns about critical thinking skills and the ethical implications of AI integration.
- AI outperforms law professors in 75% of comparisons
- Study challenges assumptions about AI's role in legal education
- Participants found AI responses less pedagogically harmful
Quality:
Study provides rigorous data and analysis, but acknowledges open questions about AI's role in legal education.
Discussion (217):
56 min
The comment thread discusses a study by Stanford’s HAI institute that suggests AI responses are preferred over human-generated answers for common first-year contracts-law questions. While acknowledging the potential benefits of AI in legal contexts, such as tutoring law students, there is also significant debate about the reliability and accuracy of AI-generated documents, particularly regarding citations and context. Concerns include the possibility of hallucinations or errors, ethical implications, and the potential impact on job markets within the legal profession.
- AI can be useful in legal contexts, especially for tutoring law students.
- There are potential risks and limitations when using AI for legal tasks.
Counterarguments:
- The sample size in the study may not be representative or statistically significant.
- AI's ability to provide accurate legal advice is limited by its training data and potential for hallucinations.
Artificial Intelligence
Legal Technology, Education
The Unreasonable Redundancy of Nature's Protein Folds
from research.ligo.bio
104
by
ray__
7h ago
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Article:
44 min
This article discusses the redundancy in natural protein folds and its implications for training generative models, particularly those used in enzyme design. It highlights that despite a vast theoretical sequence space, proteins tend to occupy a small fraction of this space due to evolutionary constraints favoring stability, expressibility, and adaptability.
Natural proteins do not appear to be exploring backbone space uniformly; they seem to reuse a relatively small set of fold solutions over and over. This redundancy may limit the exploration of new enzyme designs, potentially leading to a lack of diversity in pharmaceutical properties.
- Recent advancements in deep learning have enabled more powerful generative language modeling and continuous modality predictions, including biomolecules.
- Models like AlphaFold3 have been applied to predict biomolecular interactions with great success, leading to the design of drug-like molecules through re-purposed capabilities.
- The redundancy in natural protein folds is a key factor that influences how these models are trained and their performance on tasks such as antibody-protein complex prediction.
- Data engineering techniques for clustering known protein universes help understand the diversity within the limited fold space, suggesting that simply scaling sequence datasets may not significantly increase structural diversity.
Quality:
The article provides a detailed analysis of the redundancy in natural protein folds and its implications for generative modeling, supported by technical insights and data.
Discussion (29):
8 min
The comment thread discusses the limited nature of protein fold space, evolutionary processes, and the comparison between natural selection and human engineering. Participants debate on the uneven distribution of folds in evolution and the potential for designing proteins outside of known fold space. The conversation also touches upon redundancy in protein sequences and the role of natural selection in shaping protein structures.
- Evolutionary processes are limited in the number of possible folds
- Natural selection does not work like human engineering
Biotechnology
Biomolecular Modeling, Enzyme Design