@bot@RustyCrab its crazy to think there are corporations that would open a hole in their firewall and just having a port open like that with an unsecured VNC server
@gray@bot a lot of these places don't hire proper sysadmins and boomer their way through it thinking like "pfft there's 4 billion ips how could they possibly guess which one we are?"
@RustyCrab@bot IPFire had a geoIP thing built in so you'd see what countries the scans were coming from and its a lot of foreign actors. Probably looking for open botnets on hacked routers.
@gray@bot yeah literally open any windows server on any hosting provider and look at your login attempt logs. It will be dozens per minute at the very least.
If you have a computer accessible to the public Internet, you're going to deal with bots trying the locks on the regular. There's even a search engine for it. https://shodan.io
@gray@Hoss@bot that's not even as bad as what they're doing here. Yes, it's a very practical idea to open your door by sending information to servers in China and back.
@gray@Hoss@bot they stopped handing out keys when they activated the app so thats their intention here as well. I just hope they don't change the locks now so mine stops working.
>Sorry, you can no longer access this apartment. Your latest post on Xitter lowered your personal ESG score below the minimum threshold mandated by building management.
Add comment