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Some of you may remember this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hkDD03yeLnU
Ah, if only they had known about the Internet. Somebody has already
completed the task:
http://guivbip.codeplex.com/
Now that's progress...
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On 7/2/2013 2:12 PM, Orchid Win7 v1 wrote:
> Some of you may remember this:
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hkDD03yeLnU
>
> Ah, if only they had known about the Internet. Somebody has already
> completed the task:
>
> http://guivbip.codeplex.com/
>
> Now that's progress...
Snort.. The only thing I could think of with this insane BS was that
"somehow" the killer was using one of those magic things that let you
change your IP every 4 seconds, and yet, still have every DNS server on
the planet know where the fuck you are. Since, well.. this just isn't
possible, even that, vaguely sane, reason to need a way to track it
doesn't make a lot of sense.
Hmm. If it was a laptop, and they where trying to, say, get a
wardriver.. well, still not going to work, since most systems do NAT, to
get where you are going, so your IP is going to change, every time you
change WIFI access points, and not even IPV3 systems, so far as I know,
trace back to your actual machine, instead of the router. And, if it
did, you would have to be using something not set up with NAT, or be a
complete idiot, and, besides which, it *still* can't tell you where the
IP really is, just which poor saps router you are on, and, even then,
unless you got the addresses of every single person paying for internet
access, and somehow tracked the specific router IP, to every single one
of those illegally obtained addresses.... lol
Still, there have been some times when I really, seriously, wish
something like a, "magic universal DNS changer", did exist. Along with,
say, the magical ability to film some preachers/politicians, doing the
very things they claim, "Not passing a law to prevent chicken sex...",
or some stupid thing they are scared someone else might be doing, will
"end civilization as we know it!" Mind, just as a matter of curiosity, I
would love to know how many are secretly gay, banging farm animals,
household pets, or their own kids, then protesting that we need a bill
to, "prevent incestuous sex with household pets, which where once farm
animals." You just know, a large percentage of the nuts trying to pass
this stuff just want everyone else to stop doing it, while doing it
themselves.
And, frankly, given the latest, "Blowjobs for America" (Ur, sorry,
that's "On our knees for America", its just... that picture they chose
for the banner...) campaign, which followed the prior 2M4M campaign, and
the even earlier, "Teabagging parties", the people making their
commercials, and campaign slogans, have ***got to be*** doing some of
the same things they are protesting. lol
So.. If you had it on film, and you could deliver it, with literally no
way they could take it off the internet, short of killing the entire
network.. Ah, to dream. ;)
On that note.. Their recent antics on the whole, "abortion, instead of
jobs, or anything else", thing finally made me snap. This isn't nice, or
safe, or appropriate, or even humane, but it sums up my macabre view of
certain people, in my more disturbed moments:
http://kagehisrealm.com/Junk/bdtr_baby.png
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> IP really is, just which poor saps router you are on, and, even then,
> unless you got the addresses of every single person paying for internet
> access, and somehow tracked the specific router IP, to every single one
> of those illegally obtained addresses.... lol
Google probably has such a database. If I turn on wifi on my phone, even
without connecting to any access point, then it suddenly knows which
great accuracy where I am (far better than using phone signal
triangulation alone). I imagine it gathers this data from people who
have GPS turned on at the same time as wifi and then cross-references
the two. Now it wouldn't be impossible for Google to also store the IP
address (and MAC?) of the internet-side of the access point if you are
connected to it.
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On 7/3/2013 12:43 AM, scott wrote:
>> IP really is, just which poor saps router you are on, and, even then,
>> unless you got the addresses of every single person paying for internet
>> access, and somehow tracked the specific router IP, to every single one
>> of those illegally obtained addresses.... lol
>
> Google probably has such a database. If I turn on wifi on my phone, even
> without connecting to any access point, then it suddenly knows which
> great accuracy where I am (far better than using phone signal
> triangulation alone). I imagine it gathers this data from people who
> have GPS turned on at the same time as wifi and then cross-references
> the two. Now it wouldn't be impossible for Google to also store the IP
> address (and MAC?) of the internet-side of the access point if you are
> connected to it.
Hmm. Interesting. But, still only works if the ID is being broadcast, so
it "detectable", and other factors. So.. yeah, its still pretty absurd
an idea.
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scott wrote:
>
> Google probably has such a database. If I turn on wifi on my phone, even
> without connecting to any access point, then it suddenly knows which
> great accuracy where I am (far better than using phone signal
> triangulation alone). I imagine it gathers this data from people who
> have GPS turned on at the same time as wifi and then cross-references
> the two. Now it wouldn't be impossible for Google to also store the IP
> address (and MAC?) of the internet-side of the access point if you are
> connected to it.
A story also tells that Google was accidentally scanning the SSID's
while shooting photos for Google Maps, plotting the WLAN's and routers
on the map.
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> scott wrote:
>>
>> Google probably has such a database. If I turn on wifi on my phone, even
>> without connecting to any access point, then it suddenly knows which
>> great accuracy where I am (far better than using phone signal
>> triangulation alone). I imagine it gathers this data from people who
>> have GPS turned on at the same time as wifi and then cross-references
>> the two. Now it wouldn't be impossible for Google to also store the IP
>> address (and MAC?) of the internet-side of the access point if you are
>> connected to it.
>
> A story also tells that Google was accidentally scanning the SSID's
> while shooting photos for Google Maps, plotting the WLAN's and routers
> on the map.
>
Accidentally?
I think they the whole bottle on purpose.
--
/*Francois Labreque*/#local a=x+y;#local b=x+a;#local c=a+b;#macro P(F//
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/* gmail.com */}camera{orthographic location<6,1.25,-6>look_at a }
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>> A story also tells that Google was accidentally scanning the SSID's
>> while shooting photos for Google Maps, plotting the WLAN's and routers
>> on the map.
>>
> Accidentally?
>
> I think they the whole bottle on purpose.
Of course, that's probably where they have the database from! I don't
think people were complaining about scanning and storing the SSID (or
rather MAC), it was the fact that Google was saving all the packet data
and not just extracting the MAC address. From a purely technical point
of view saving all data is probably safest (to save having to drive
around large parts of the country again if you discover a bug in your
analysis code).
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Francois Labreque wrote:
>
> Accidentally?
Yep, the story sais accidentally. IIRC they commented something like "Oh
my, did we do so? That must have been an accident, we surely didn't mean
to".
> I think they the whole bottle on purpose.
But they want to be known as friendly, so it can't be possible that
they're doing something like that on purpose :P.
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> Francois Labreque wrote:
>>
>> Accidentally?
>
> Yep, the story sais accidentally. IIRC they commented something like "Oh
> my, did we do so? That must have been an accident, we surely didn't mean
> to".
So a car that drives around taking pictures also accidentally is
listening on the 2.4GHz band. That's plausible, if they're wifi-ing the
images from the roof cameras to the computers in the trunk of the car.
And it's also accidentally recording all the SSIDs it finds. That is
explanable by the fact that they might be debugging their code as they
go along, so they're also running a wifi-enabled packet sniffer at the
same time.
And it's also accidentally recording the mac addresses associated with
that SSID. Still in the realm of possibly accidental.
And it's also associating the GPS coordinates where that SSID/Mac combo
was seen. Now we've moved into definite deliberate territory.
Speaking of Google Maps,
[Cool Story Bro]
I'm in the burgundy civic, behind the dump truck!
https://maps.google.com/?ll=45.562344,-73.776273&spn=0.001775,0.00327&t=m&z=19&layer=c&cbll=45.562258,-73.776526&panoid=R4l3vadp1A5GaaJblfilqA&cbp=12,23.81,,0,31.71
[/CSB]
--
/*Francois Labreque*/#local a=x+y;#local b=x+a;#local c=a+b;#macro P(F//
/* flabreque */L)polygon{5,F,F+z,L+z,L,F pigment{rgb 9}}#end union
/* @ */{P(0,a)P(a,b)P(b,c)P(2*a,2*b)P(2*b,b+c)P(b+c,<2,3>)
/* gmail.com */}camera{orthographic location<6,1.25,-6>look_at a }
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> So a car that drives around taking pictures also accidentally is
> listening on the 2.4GHz band. That's plausible, if they're wifi-ing the
> images from the roof cameras to the computers in the trunk of the car.
>
> And it's also accidentally recording all the SSIDs it finds. That is
> explanable by the fact that they might be debugging their code as they
> go along, so they're also running a wifi-enabled packet sniffer at the
> same time.
>
> And it's also accidentally recording the mac addresses associated with
> that SSID. Still in the realm of possibly accidental.
>
> And it's also associating the GPS coordinates where that SSID/Mac combo
> was seen. Now we've moved into definite deliberate territory.
All the above is what the car was *meant* to do (it was well publicised
and I never heard anyone have a problem with it), the bit that caused
problems is the saving of *all* the other data from the wifi (especially
a problem if the wifi is not encrypted).
Actually researching a bit further it turns out the code didn't even
bother saving the encrypted packets. The below article has a good few
links to Google blogs and announcements with details:
http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2012/05/google-wifi-fcc-investigation/
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