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When 0+1+0+1=0.
I hope the next podcast is NOT about a new, improved, backup process and is instead about a quick, easy, recovery you did from your already perfect backups. 😬
A raid is not a backup o0
Or do you mean this is your backup place?
In that case just get a new disk and redo it?
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the thing about pagers is they have a nice reliable digital radio in them that you can broadcast to. Since they've gone to the trouble of swapping out a shipment of pagers, I would assume they had a batch of custom PCBs made that mostly function like the originals but have an extra spicy GPIO.
Might even have assembled a batch of complete pagers and just substituted them in transit, it's not like you can't order moulded pager-cases by the 10k from China.
@SteveBellovin we (volunteer firefighters in AU) use VHF broadcast pagers.
Each pager is configured with a list of special strings, might even be regexes. When a page is received, it is displayed if it matches the configured strings.
By distributing modified pagers - they need an extra output for the fuze, plus the explosive itself - they would be probably be programmed to initiate the fuze on receipt of a specific string.
@SteveBellovin after reading the standards, there seem to be two phases for a group call.
In the first phase, a temporary group address is configured by sending control messages addressed to each group member individually. This takes some time, but the users are not being alerted yet.
In the second phase, the actual text messages is addressed to the temporary group address that is now known by the group members. All group members receive the text message at the same time.
The plot continues to thicken, with another wave of exploding devices reported among Hezbollah members around Lebanon today. This time, it appears to include walkie-talkie-type radios. I've not yet found reliable reports of specific models of radios, so it's hard to even speculate yet on how these might have been triggered - possibly over the air, but also possibly with a pre-set timer.
What's clear is that Hezbollah's supply chain problem is even worse than it seemed yesterday.
so uh, if someone lived somewhere else and had happen to bought walkie talkies or pagers in the last couple years, how worried should they be that they might have inadvertently been exposed to this?
Feels like only a couple boxes in the supply chain have to have been shipped to the wrong spot before things get more awful. How do the manufacturers avoid having to do a full recall?
The thing I don't get: This, as you mention, burns the capability and I suspect it really steps to the line on multiple IHL rules. This was not a particularly well-targeted attack.
All this... to what end? To kill a few people indiscriminately? To briefly disrupt a communication network? Just... to flex?
Maybe they're seeing something I don't but I don't get the strategic value of doing something this gross.
It's likely, IMHO, that was part of the point. They want to disrupt the target's ability to resupply, not just the immediate resources used to attack.
The attack doesn't just maim and kill people and disrupt materiel, it makes all future acquisition of materiel slower as they know it must be vetted thoroughly. Were I a military strategist, that's the kind of long-term damage to an enemy supply chain I could only hope to accomplish.
On the latest round of explosions, so far I've found a couple photos of a mangled Icom model V82 walkie-talkie, a discontinued (but still widely available around the world in counterfeited form) commercial analog two-way radio.
But it's unclear if that's the only type of device that exploded today, and it's also possible that the various photos I've seen are all of the same individual radio. Still haven't seen good authoritative reports of the scope and scale of todays wave of explosions.
Do pagers work on planes?
I've seen people saying this attack could have killed many more if they had gone off on a flight.
The timer theory could have caused that kind of disaster but the signal theory not, if you can't get paged on a flight.
Tomorrow it's gonna be one modern car whose brake-by-wire fails mysteriously at 60 mph.
Doesn't need to be pervasive, or even repeatable. Just need to sow discord & suspicion.
Walkie-talkie radios differ from pagers in several relevant ways here. First, they're larger, and so have room to hide more explosive material; some of the images I've seen show damaged buildings, suggesting larger explosions than we saw with the pagers.
Second, walkie-talkies aren't generally carried around all the time the way pagers are. They typically spend a lot of time off and sitting in a charger, possibly near other radios. This is also consistent with the images of damaged buildings.
Some new details reported in this NYT article (gift link: nytimes.com/2024/09/18/world/m…)
This fills in some gaps, assuming it's accurate (caveat here, given anonymous, presumably motivated sources):
- The pagers were manufactured by a Hungary-based Israeli shell company and used a special battery containing PETN.
- The explosions were trigged in real time, but no details about the specific triggering mechanism.
- No details about how the exploding walkie-talkies worked or how they were inserted.
@mvario
" kill them all and let the God of Abraham sort it out"- Jewish Space Pagers
Crimes against humanity in the name of Israel is anti-Semitic
After another day, the contrast between the large amount of information known/leaked about the pagers and the paucity of detail about the radios is even more conspicuous to me.
Most of the detail about the pager attack (shell companies, explosives built into batteries, etc) appears to have come directly from Israel, which benefits from advertising that it had this capability now that it's burned. But the radios likely exploited a different channel, probably one they still want to protect.
And we know almost NOTHING about how the radios were compromised, not even insider speculation. We don't even know that it was a supply chain attack in the sense that the pagers were.
My guess, with no inside information, is that the radios may have been compromised with the help of a recruited agent working for Hezbollah and still inside Lebanon. That's obviously not something you'd want to draw attention to if you're Israel.
Bunnie has a credible breakdown of the engineering required to make a version of this. I would guess in both the pager and radio case the signaling used the host device's radio and firmware mods or bugs.
An important tl;dr takeaway from this whole story: These explosions were not caused by a software bug or cyberattack that could be arbitrarily repeated against ordinary pagers, radios, or phones. This was an extremely sophisticated, at least somewhat risky, and definitely expensive intelligence and sabotage operation that involved covertly getting special devices rigged with explosives into the hands of Hezbollah affiliates.
In other words, no one can just type a command to blow up your phone.
@fullyabstract It is one of those ideas too good for those desiring to do harm to leave on the table, now that it's demonstrated.
It does strike me as an attack vector only open to nation-state (or de-facto nation-state) actors though. Individual corporations would have reputations that could suffer if they used this to attack other organizations, and smaller outfits wouldn't have the supply-chain penetration (unless they were functioning as the government over a portion of the chain).
@EricFielding : what I don’t understand is how you manage to get from "signal received" to "activate explosion".
It means, that their should be some new wires through which the reprogrammed pager will send current when a given message is received ?
Or it could be a whole shunt of, for example, the screen with its own chipset which would analyse what is diplayed and activate explosive when "xxxx" is displayed.
How do you debug such a code…
A bit more info has come out about the exploding walkie-talkies: according to a Lebanese source in this article, several battery packs exploded that were not attached to radios. That suggests that the radios themselves were likely not tampered with, and that the rogue battery packs were self-contained bombs, with an integrated trigger that didn’t rely on the host radio.
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Ultimately, the interesting part of this whole story isn't the specifics of how the explosives worked. It's not particularly surprising that a county like Israel could manufacture and conceal explosives (and a trigger, etc) inside working 2-way radio battery packs or pocket pagers.
The truly sophisticated and frightening capability here is injecting those rigged devices, at scale, into their (presumably also sophisticated) adversary's hands without being noticed.
bunniestudios.com/blog/2024/tu…
U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield stated that the United States has reviewed President Zelensky's plan for ending the war and considers it a viable option.
She emphasized the importance of engaging with world leaders during the meetings in New York to explore ways to support this plan.
Thomas-Greenfield expressed hope for progress, indicating the U.S.'s intent to contribute to the effort through diplomatic discussions with other nations.
#AureFreePress #Ukraine️
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Never have I read on a remote individually targeted attack of this scale.
OSINT rumors going around suggest PETN. Cannot verify this.
But here's one source:
boltsmag.org/elections-chief-e…
Asylum seekers: what now?
In the face of the continuing controversies and hardships in Australia’s refugee and asylum seeker policies and practices, Michael Liffman proposes consideration of an initiative he first suggested over ten years ago. #Auspol
Will your face be your fortune?
You used to pay for everything by cash, then came cheques, credit cards and taps of a mobile phone, but would you be willing to pay for your supermarket trolley by just showing your face? #Shopping
Rounding up the e-scooters
Dumped E-bikes and e-scooters litter our pavements, while in use they menace pedestrians and cause danger on the roads, but a new survey of their use in Melbourne offers some strategies to at least minimise the parking problem. #Transport

Mulkurul
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dancing interlude during out demons out at a couple of gigs... Had copies of their first two albums bee coarse me bird was secretary at Blackhill enterprises wot
managed 'em... I even met the Broughton boys mum, she was lovely, dose were
the daze...
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