Listening to cybersecurity people freak out over Mythos is so tiring. Like, bro, your local water treatment plant runs Windows XP, your mobile provider's hardware is older than you are, and the protocol that routes internet traffic is secured by everyone just agreeing that hijacking it would be uncool.
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@malwaretech don’t ask how old the code your bank runs on is.
@malwaretech when I worked at Sprint, we had to figure out crazy workarounds because if we update IE from a version that was 5 years old at the time, none of the system portals would work
@malwaretech and everyone is still getting phished!
@malwaretech I bet there are still some people still running control systems on NT 4.0. Nice and "secure" because it doesn't support USB. Win95 probably lurking in the controller off many CNC machines too.
@malwaretech The 'cybersecurity' people I hear speaking of gloom and doom also happen to have a product ready to release in a week or two, but can't demo it or explain what it actually does. They're selling.
@malwaretech yet another thing that needs my ministry I suppose; something something implementation diversity
@malwaretech Is Mythos any good though? I can't find any actual results through all the hype.
@malwaretech ah just like SS7, vulnerable since 1975, still in use, still vulnerable 😂
@malwaretech hey man, it would be really cringe if you misused the protocols that allow us to route internet traffic. Seriously, it would be great if one of these companies would come out with a comic book villain product that was meant to help users and corps efficiently remediate their vulnerabilities instead of exploiting them. Not to mention the hype. Mythos seems to only mark a tangible improvement over previous models in its testing, not the end of security as we know it. The initial article about Mythos sounds like one of the marketing team just played *Hacknet* and really likes the idea of the super hacker tool that can hack all the things when you type "./hack" into a terminal.