

01·
1 month agoUnfortunately despite the title, that’s not what they’re known for. Bad person died.
Whatup fellow kids, you gettin’ indoctrinated by the man on the world wide web? Radical!
Trivia: My usernames are based on old emulators. Sixtyforce in this case, first seen on Mac OS in the year 2000.
🇨🇦
Unfortunately despite the title, that’s not what they’re known for. Bad person died.
Level1techs already does on a separate channel, they’re friends with Gamer’s Nexus, and met up in person recently. I’d bet that’s the inspiration haha.
Still committing OPSEC crimes, but I’m not as bad as I could be :P
I think we’re talking about different sets of standards. Even with that in mind, my own “trusted” list is a much smaller handful of any list posted online. Trust in pirate spaces shouldn’t mean at face value and should be constantly tested with stuff like virustotal. It just means I haven’t been compromised or seen anyone else report back with an infection for a long stretch of time on a specific website. There’s always occasional breaches as malware enthusiasts test the waters now and then, usually not with a big/popular release. Stuff that could fly under the radar. Usually it comes down to whether or not that website has an active comment section or forum with active mods/admins who stamp it out continuously. I tend to prefer traditional bulletin board forums. rutracker.org or cs.rin.ru. I still don’t touch any file right away. I let other people be the “brave” lab rats. See if any squeal first. I tend to avoid niche application piracy entirely. Those seem (and have been in my youth) to be the virus hotbeds cracked by total unknown entities. Plus I don’t mind paying for independent / small company niche software. Often enough in those cases I can find a free open source alternative anyways.
It’s worked out so far. I haven’t been compromised in my adult years. But this isn’t some “do as I do” thing, it’s basically internet street smarts. Comes with experience and infections. I minimize risk and can trust my gut now, but I acknowledge it’ll never be risk free.
Separate computer. An otherwise useless old laptop running Fedora. OPSEC would probably say it’s not good enough because it’s on the same network as computers which installed pirated software.
GrapheneOS here which does sandbox better than most, but I don’t use my smartphone for anything sensitive. That’s really without trying to, it’s just not something I ever felt the need to use a smartphone for. I’m not as familiar with Android/Linux as I am with Windows. I know exactly where to periodically check for telltale signs of infection on Windows. I can still bend that OS to my will even as it gets worse for most end users. I’m less sure of myself on anything else. Working on that, HTPC is Fedora KDE spin now. Like you say, not much mobile games to play. I think I’ve bought like…3 ever. So, never felt much need to sideload. I usually stick to F-Droid and NDS emulators anyways. I have a Picross / Picross 3D addiction.
Usually, but sometimes there can be a flaw in a specific application exploited. I don’t think I know of any from media formats outside of maliciously edited ROM files smc or v/z64 for cartridge based system emulators like extremely outdated ZSNES or Project64 1.6 specifically.