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Cake day: June 11th, 2023

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  • what I want to stress out at this point is that due to the techniques required to crack a game (dll injection, ssl pinning bypass, syscall hooking and more) are used by malware

    that though leaves you completely unaware if the crack is benign or not. It could be or it could be not. “but it worked fine for me” is also not a good enough pointer as it’s very common practice making the malware run only under certain conditions (after a month, only when the PC is idle or the screen is locked, or make it extremely lightweight - just upload all your browser cookies once a day

    if you get hit by something like this there’s no going back. you need to format. there are very, VERY weird ways that a malware can replicate/hide itself to.

    software has, is and always will be a game of trust. do you trust the cracker? or even the company that makes the software? and if so, why

    I always suggest to never run cracks on a machine that is used to log into personal accounts

    The only crack that I actually trust is mass grave (windows & office crack). It’s a powershell script so you can just read its source code




  • dzervas@lemmy.worldtoMemes@lemmy.mlMy holy trinity of trust
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    1 year ago

    just a side note for everyone out there that uses bitwarden: you can reset your password with just your email. that means the admin can see your passwords. The only 3 upstream password managers that don’t have that “feature” are 1Password, lastpass and keypass (not counting gpg-based script in bash n friends). Lastpass is obviously a mediocre solution (too many breaches), keypass isn’t for everyone (UX). 1Password is a very solid solution and it has public security audits

    I’ve got nothing with agilebits/1Password - i just use it after spending days researching (also I’m a former IT security engineer)