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029 - Minimize not Militarize and Avoiding Surveillance with GrapheneOS


Episode 29


In this episode, I explore the difference between the military mindset and the more stealth approach of minimization in cybersecurity. I share the results from the Ghost in the Source Capture the Flag (CTF) challenge, revealing how the winners cracked the AES encryption using dictionary attacks, keyword harvesting and the cipher tool hidden in robots.txt. I discuss why the “assume breach” mentality just leaves the doors wide open, using examples from Kevin Mitnick’s 1981 Pacific Bell infiltration to modern ransomware groups like Scattered Spider who breached MGM and Marks & Spencer through social engineering.

I also cover practical tactics for using public Wi-Fi, data curation techniques, the invisible surveillance net including Stingray devices, and provide a deep dive into GrapheneOS covering user profiles, app sandboxing, network controls, sensor permissions, and the proper use of sandboxed Google Play services.

In this week’s episode:

  1. Ghost in the Source Capture the Flag challenge results
  2. The military mindset problem in cybersecurity
  3. Strategic use of public Wi-Fi for account creation and privacy techniques
  4. Data curation tactics, and “Minimizing What Can Be Known”
  5. Invisible surveillance net and Stingray devices
  6. GrapheneOS discussion on user profiles, app sandboxing, network controls, sensors permissions, sandboxed Google Play services, and security architecture

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“We’re dragons. We’re not supposed to live by other people’s rules.”

- Hajime Ryudo

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Published on 2 months ago






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