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Funny picture thread


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2011 Dec 9, 1:03am   1,230,955 views  9,198 comments

by zzyzzx   ➕follow (9)   💰tip   ignore  

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3869   Bd6r   2021 Sep 28, 8:50pm  

3870   Bd6r   2021 Sep 28, 8:51pm  

3871   Bd6r   2021 Sep 28, 8:52pm  

3872   Bd6r   2021 Sep 28, 8:56pm  

3873   Bd6r   2021 Sep 28, 8:59pm  

3883   Patrick   2021 Oct 2, 11:11pm  




OK, not technically a funny picture, but dayum.
3892   Patrick   2021 Oct 10, 10:53pm  

Oh, that's sad.
3893   Ceffer   2021 Oct 10, 11:33pm  

Yeah. There’s the dumb stick, and dumb and dumber stick. I’d call this dude the latter.
3895   Patrick   2021 Oct 11, 10:21am  

He never even got close to that.
3899   Patrick   2021 Oct 13, 1:05pm  

Video above shows reality defeating ideology.
3900   HeadSet   2021 Oct 13, 2:09pm  

Hey, the ladies got a free jacket. Free handcuffs for the cameraman, too.
3903   RWSGFY   2021 Oct 14, 8:01pm  

HunterTits says
Affirmative Action Hires on the force:




#stupidcunts
3907   Patrick   2021 Oct 18, 12:26pm  

Thanks, DNS sure is a weak point, along with SSL, but I hadn't consider that BGP is too.

https://www.cloudflare.com/learning/security/glossary/what-is-bgp/

In 2004, a Turkish ISP called TTNet accidentally advertised incorrect BGP routes to its neighbors. These routes claimed that TTNet itself was the best destination for all traffic on the Internet. As these routes spread further and further to more autonomous systems, a massive disruption occurred, creating a one-day crisis where many people across the world were not able to access some or all of the Internet.

Similarly, in 2008, a Pakistani ISP attempted to use a BGP route to block Pakistani users from visiting YouTube. The ISP then accidentally advertised these routes with its neighboring ASes and the route quickly spread across the Internet’s BGP network. This route sent users trying to access YouTube to a dead end, which resulted in YouTube’s being inaccessible for several hours.

These are examples of a practice called BGP hijacking, which does not always happen accidentally. In April 2018, attackers deliberately created bad BGP routes to redirect traffic that was meant for Amazon’s DNS service. The attackers were able to steal over $100,000 worth of cryptocurrency by redirecting the traffic to themselves.

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