Initial commit: HPR Knowledge Base MCP Server
- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
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Episode: 103
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Title: HPR0103: Community Rant
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0103/hpr0103.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-07 11:31:35
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---
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.
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Hi, this is Totenkov, and I'll be talking about the hacker community both in real life as well as online.
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Let's start with a brief look back on the community and scene.
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Before the turn of the century, we were a pretty cool group of people.
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The hacker halfway house was operating semi-functionally.
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2600 was being read.
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Defcon was actually about hacking and exchanging exploits ideas and information.
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And we actually did stuff.
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We threw the best parties, did insane amounts of drinking, and we either collaborated on or shared the end result of our projects with other hackers.
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It was great, but then we let our inherently lazy nature take over.
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The hacker halfway house is no longer what it used to be.
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We let drama, disrespect, and disregard to our brothers and their property get in the way of having a common meeting ground.
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2600 is now concert 12th paper, and it's not just a manual's fault.
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We got lazy and decided not to write articles that are informative, interesting, or relevant.
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We are the ones who sat idly by, as crap on botnets and hacking my space gets published.
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Defcon is becoming about business cards swapping and e-peness measuring.
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It's time for us to do something, not just the veterans, even though they know how things were and should be.
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Nor should it be just the newcomers, although they need to recognize that the old schoolers have something to teach them.
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We need to pull together and show the world who we really are.
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We're not bot hunters or Chinese credit card broaders.
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We're the ones who gave the internet, improve hardware so it runs more efficiently.
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Hell, we create code for the software they use in order to feel safe from us.
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We need to make ourselves hurt again.
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When you're at work school or at a store, and here's someone misuse the term hacker, call them on it.
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Don't be a jerk.
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Explain that we're people who manipulate technology so it works better than it did before.
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Did you read a blog entry about hack sores?
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Just calmly reply and inform them that we don't speak with numbers, thus they shouldn't write with them.
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Read the wired article describing us as Trinity loving cyber sex scenes.
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Write them an intelligently worded letter stating that you hate the matrix and that USB ports aren't penis friendly.
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Or that they are, either way, the mainstream media needs to be informed when it comes to who we are and what we do.
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Only a margin of us are straight up chaos causing assholes, and we need to let people know.
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It's about time for us to have a reawakening, and in order for it to work, we need to work together.
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Girls, women, don't sit quietly while the guys talk shop.
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Join in when you know something about the subject matter.
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We're good for things besides making sandwiches and burden babies.
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But on the flip side, don't come in and try to start drama or bitch excessively on the IRC network.
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We have to work especially hard to be recognized as a valuable member of the community, and it only takes one stupid little girl to set the rest of us back.
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Guys, don't be an ass pony.
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The dog jokes really aren't that funny, and are only useful if you don't want to get laid, ever.
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If she doesn't know what she's talking about, call her on it.
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Don't troll them out of the community, but correct it.
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We all need to get more involved, attend a 2600 or bin rev meeting, and actually talk.
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Don't just sit there. Submit talks to comms that have nothing to do with botnets or poning a wireless network.
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Start or help out with the hacker space.
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Don't be an ass hat to your fellow hacker or someone who wants to start hacking.
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We all have our weaknesses and strengths and need to recognize this.
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I know this hasn't been a long broadcast or provided any new information,
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but this has been bugging me for a while, and I just had to let it out.
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But I do promise if Venigma lets me have a spot next month, I'll talk about something that's at least semi-cool.
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Thank you and good night.
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Thank you for listening to Hack with Public Radio.
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We are sponsored by Carol.net.
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So head on over to C-A-R-O dot E-C for all of us here.
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Thanks for watching.
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