What were you doing when you were just 10 years old? Were you able to find any software bugs and win a boatload of cash for it?
I sure wasn’t, but a Finnish boy named Jani recently told about an Instagram bug would let anyone delete comments inside the app. The social network rewarded him with $10,000 for his discovery. It turns out that Jani is not only good with computers already, but he has a great sense of humor. DON’T MISS: The young computer wiz recently sent a hilarious letter in which he details his other amazing hacks and accomplishments which are yet to net him payouts similar to what Facebook bestowed upon him.
Whois Record of forkplayer.tv Domain Name: FORKPLAYER.TV Registry Domain ID: 114045013_DOMAIN_TV-VRSN Registrar WHOIS Server: whois.PublicDomainRegistry.com Registrar URL: Updated Date: 2017-06-06T08:07:21Z Creation Date: 2015-08-03T17:28:28Z Registry Expiry Date: 2018-08-03T17:28:28Z Registrar: PDR LTD. D/B/A PUBLICDOMAINREGISTRY.COM Registrar IANA ID: 303 Registrar Abuse Contact Email: [email protected] Registrar Abuse Contact Phone: +1. Most sessions are initiated from Russian Federation - 38.8%, Ukraine - 24.5%, Germany - 5.6%, Belarus - 6.3%, Poland - 3.4% Worth of forkplayer.tv (based on advertising revenue only): $75 Thousand.
Here’s the full letter, as originally published: Hello good adults of the Internet, it is I, Jani, the boy genius who understands computers more than you. I would like to thank Facebook for the $10,000. I will be investing all of it in my Dave & Busters Power Card so my birthday party is better than Billy’s birthday party.
But, I assure you, I am not writing this note merely to express my gratitude. I have discovered several other flaws in the tech I use every day, and I would like to make the world aware of them now. Please pay me $10,000 for each of these. There is a flaw in the Playstation network that allows my mom to turn off the game when it is late 2. Snyder’s best efforts, I have once again gotten AddictingGames.net up on the school library computers 3.
There is a fatal flaw in Madden 2016 that does not allow me to create 10-year-old players who defy the odds and win the Offensive Rookie of the Year award 4. There is a vulnerability in Facebook that makes all of the girls I like not like my statuses 5.
Whenever my parents tell me to go to my room and play on my iPad they start fighting — I believe signals from the iPad are causing this 6. There is a massive vulnerability in Youtube that is causing myMinecraft gameplay videos to not receive the millions of views they deserve 7. The laser tag place by my house has a flaw in their receptors that allows my older brother Ricky to beat me easily no matter how hard I try 8. After several visits with my family, I have discovered and reported a grievous error in the crossword puzzle located on the Buffalo Wild Wings Kid’s Menu 9.
I have found a vulnerability in my Little League team’s Squarespace page that allowed me to change my batting average to well over.900 for the season Also, I hacked President Obama’s phone but it’s just a bunch of boring emails and “launch codes” and nothing about the next Avengers movie so who even cares. Thank you for your time, Jani.
Sorry to flood the comments, but thinking about it, that scene in the movie was (further) BS because the Atari Portfolio he used has no I/O built in really. You’d need the parallel or serial expansion port as seen in the link below for proper I/O.
Even if Serial or Parallel was bilt in, he would need some sort of devices to get the proper power levels and logic, etc for this to work Would be cool though to get one w/ the I/O and make a “portable” version. Software to bruteforce electronic locks, etc would be not far off.
Anyone messed w/ PocketPC I/O via bluetooth or CF? @xdox #9 It’s pretty obvious but basically this fools a card-accepting machine into thinking your actually swiping a card, while you’re actually using the device to generate whatever data you want. So if you were, say, at a university that uses a magstripe-based cash system for vending machines/public washing machines/dorm access/etc and you knew that all the card has on it is the students name, you could very well program this thing to generate someone else’s name and use their money. That’s just an example, but it just simulates a magstripe card for whatever reason.
You could very well carry this thing around programmed with your credit card info and your student ID and all that, with one device! Yea, you’d get weird looks (or arrested) but it would work. CaptSnuffy, I followed his page.
There’s some bad info on some of those links, “breaking Visa PIN” would be one of them. PIN data hasn’t been stored on Visa cards since the early 1980s. All authorizing is done on line (or offline at the full risk of the merchant.) The PIN, in conjunction with a secret key securely injected into an authorized PIN pad, is only used to encrypt some transactional info to send as a part of an authorization request. What he mistakenly calls the P.V.V.
Is really the C.V.V. — card verification value. It’s a random nonce included in the auth request to convince the authorizing bank that your mag stripe was present, and that someone didn’t just invent a fake mag stripe by knowing your name, account number and expiration date.
It has nothing to do with your PIN. The real PIN Verification Value, P.V.V., is generated and stored securely only in the mainframe computer of the bank. It is only used to verify an authorization request, and never, ever leaves the bank. The computer program he wrote to do the decryption will never return anything of value. My buddy ended up buying one of these a while back and we ended up only using it to copy print cards for the printers at school. So $5 worth of prints was saved on our computer and when we ran out on the card we would just reflash them.
Sadly cards like starbucks and bestbuy cards are saved with a database number and will only work once. No matter how many copys you make. It is all system registered, not card. Mathematica 7 license number keygen download. One way to tell is to check to see if the card is read, Then written too again. Lick on the copy cards.
Once in, charge you $, then back out and it writes back to the card on the way out. Kode registrasi orochi 3. Theres a great software for copying cards (and saving them) off this german site. ANd if you are too lazy to build your own circut then you can splurge and be ready to pay a nice 255.97 USD. (You want the reader/writer) the reader by it self is useless.
But the app that you can get off there site works great. @20 jason hazel from the magstripe basics text file by count zero: “Well, that’s all I’m going to put out right now. As you can see, the major types of cards (ATMs, CC) all follow the same rules more or less. I checked out a number of security passcards and timeclock entry cards.and they ALL had random stuff written to Track 2. Track 2 is by FAR the MOST utilized track on the card.
And the format is pretty much always ANSI/ISO BCD. I.did. run into some hotel room access cards that, when scanned, were GARBLED. They most likely used a character set other than ASCII (if they were audio tones, my reader would have put out NOTHINGas opposed to GARBLED data). As you can see, one could write a BOOK listing different types of card data.
I intended only to give you some examples. My research has been limited, but I tried to make logical conclusions based on the data I received. Does this work on train tickets? In the UK they seem to use some kind of magnetic strip on the back, would be handy to change the date on your ticket, ticket collectors hardly ever come round / never check the date on the ticket and its just getting through barriers which is the problem?
Dave And Busters Power Card Hack
Is it a magnetic strip storing the data on the tickets? What about tube tickets? Tubes dont have ticket collectors so unlimited free travel on the london underground would be pretty sweet! Or is it done differently? What about those oyster card things?
Dave And Busters Card Hack
I should imagine they are tied into some central database If anyones got any info at all please share it! Thanks a lot, Chris. Well, I think it’s safe to say that chris has a good, but highly illegal idea, and it would be purely irresponisle to tell him that the best idea is to read the magnetic stripe on his tocket with a reader and see what it says. In all honesty, you’d probably get away with it for a wek or two before someone cottoned on.
And if you got through a barrier, THEN had someone check the ticket, they’re gonna want to know how you got through the barrier at all. Don;t do it at Oxford station?
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