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947 lines
23 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2986
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Title: HPR2986: Onlykey Updated
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2986/hpr2986.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 14:20:55
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 2986 for Monday 13 January 2020.
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Today's show is entitled Only Key Updated
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and is part of the series' Privacy and Security,
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it is the 40th anniversary show of operator
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and is about 23 minutes long
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and carries an explicit flag. The summer is
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only key more like you better have two keys.
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Quote-
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by
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An Honesthost.com
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting
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with the offer code HPR15
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that's HPR15
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair
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at An Honesthost.com
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Music
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Hello everyone, welcome to another episode of Hacker Public Radio
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and your host, Operator.
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I spent the past 40 minutes or so
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fussing around with the only key.
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So this is about a hardware-based key
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or password manager or authentication device.
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So I'm going to go over it. I've gone over it before
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I think I did a video along with audio
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about how to set them up
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kind of properly and some caveats there.
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But I just wanted to add some more caveats
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because they just had an update
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and some tooling and whatever.
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So it's always been a little bit struggling
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to use this device.
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It's very user friendly
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but at the same time it can be complex
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to understand the layers and how it works.
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So it's easy to use
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but kind of hard to understand
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that that makes any sense.
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So what they added with the new features
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so some of the features basically are
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it has a little key fob you wear
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and I don't know if you've heard of UB key
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or any of those like that.
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It's the same type of thing.
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It's a teensy sort of device
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and it has six buttons on it
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that you can program up to I think 12
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and then I think can add an additional double that
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because you can have a second profile
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that's a fake profile I guess or whatever.
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So it has plausible
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that I ability features in it.
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And it also has support
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for like a bunch of two FAs like Google
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and OTA and something else.
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The only key or UB key stuff.
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You can put keys in there
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and then those keys can sync up to accounts.
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So for example if you're doing something
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like Microsoft they don't natively support Microsoft's
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to FAA but Microsoft supports Google
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so you can pipe Google's to FAA into Microsoft
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and then when you authenticate to FAA
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to Microsoft it essentially
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it syndicates with Google
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which essentially talks to your UB key
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which essentially is your single
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sort of single factor basically.
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So that's how crazy you can get with it.
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So any two FAA device has like usually
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either a Google write or a duo
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or whatever or more of a OTP provider.
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So anyways that's the features.
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There's a bunch of other features in there
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you can store keys in it.
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You can store all kinds of crazy stuff.
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You can do a bunch of other things
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like it's like a single authentication device
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is the idea they're trying to pair up
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with other applications and whatever.
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So the outside of the defaults
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what you get is not only people have like a URL
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a username and a password.
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You can also set up
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what I have to do is I set up different things
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for when I change my password.
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So if I had to repeat my password
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and an old and new I can have a copy
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sort of essentially of my old and new password.
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So when I'm changing my password
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I have those keys set up.
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And what I would say is if you do get it by one,
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if you don't like it, give it away.
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If you do like it,
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you're going to want to purchase another one
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because basically it's your two-factor authentication.
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So if you lose it, forget it.
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Forget it at the house
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and you proceed to try to log in.
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You're not going to be able to log in
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because you don't know when you have your passwords.
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So it's something you have
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and if you don't have it, obviously you can't log in.
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So what I would suggest is what I've had to do is
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when I got it,
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I thought it was cool to use it for a few days
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and then I realized,
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hey, if I forget this,
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if I leave it in my, you know,
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one computer and put it in an uploader,
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especially if you're taking it
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from one computer to the other,
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you're going to want to make sure
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that you keep it on you, whatever.
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It does have,
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they give you the option to buy,
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it's fairly expensive actually,
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to buy the little trinket that hooks to like a badge.
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I would suggest finding one of those on cheap online.
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They charge like $5 or something ridiculous.
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It's really expensive,
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but it's nice, hasn't come apart.
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It's not cheap.
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It's sturdy.
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So chances are,
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I actually,
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my child or somebody was preparing,
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pulling on the UBH,
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and the lane you're broke
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before any of the UBH stuff broke.
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So I've had it for two or three years now.
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I like it,
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but I have,
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you know,
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I selfishly have cornered twice now.
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So I'll kind of go over what I did and how I did it.
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If you have one of the original ones
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with the older firmware,
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it's like beta six,
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I think,
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you have to do a teensy method to patch it.
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So you get this patch,
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you have to figure out
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which one you have.
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So there's different versions.
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So there's,
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at least two different versions,
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you figure out which one you want,
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and then there's also like an international,
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which has the 2FA,
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or has the,
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I think it has the plausible deniability stuff in it.
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I'm not really sure what the two differences are,
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but I think it's,
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I think it's an additional plausible deniability
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or an additional profile,
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or maybe they'd combine those two,
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I don't know.
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But anyways,
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you just have to be very cautious
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of what firmware,
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obviously you push these things,
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or you might end up kind of
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breaking it,
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and get the,
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kind of start over.
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And that's why it's good to have two,
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if you do any firmware updates,
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just have a backup of your password,
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super early.
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Somewhere, just in case you break the thing,
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and you can't log in to anything anymore,
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because you've,
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break to your own link,
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up the location device.
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So the first time I did it,
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you,
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you have ten outs on there,
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and you short out two pins,
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and,
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or you press a button on two corners of the thing,
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and then you flash the firmware,
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with the teensy,
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if you've ever done any teensy stuff,
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firmware flashing.
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It's quick,
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fast.
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I didn't have any issues with that,
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but I did try to make,
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you know, make sure that I did it the right way,
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and it did take me a while to read the documentation
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and make sure I was doing it the right way,
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because I didn't want to break it,
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or anything like that.
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And I don't think there is a,
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I don't think there's possibility
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that I could happen.
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You can always flash
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an old firmware to it,
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I feel like.
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I don't know if you can actually
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break the things,
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but in my experience,
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it's always better to take extra time
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when you're doing firmware stuff,
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and not have to go back
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and read you the old thing,
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which I've had to do.
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So that's the legacy updates.
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Now, with the newer updates,
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it used to be key-based,
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so you had to have a key,
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an RSA key,
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it's just a certificate, basically.
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But now,
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you can have a passphrase.
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And that passphrase is set up
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to, I think, just be built
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into the backup itself.
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So the backup itself,
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I think, actually,
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has the passphrase
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that goes with it in it.
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So instead of having to have a key
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with the passphrase,
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this standard, you know,
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whatever,
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it's built into the device,
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so all you have to do
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is remember your master password.
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You don't have to have a key file.
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Now, you can do that.
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I think you can do one or the other.
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I don't think you can do both.
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But again, the idea is that,
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if you don't want to worry about the key thing,
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and I have a key file,
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and I haven't uploaded that or whatever,
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you can just remember a master password
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that's long and complex.
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It's a minimum of like 25 characters.
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So I had to reach to get to that point,
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because I have several key passphrases
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that are in my head,
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and I had to come up with a long one for this one.
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But anyways, now there's the password,
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passphrase option to keep your,
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to do your backups and stuff.
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What I will say is that all the other backups I have
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are now worthless,
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and I don't think you can restore anything.
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So what happened is that,
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there's a beta 8 out now,
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and I'll put links in the show notes
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to the videos and stuff in the builds.
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But there's a beta 8 now that's not,
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I guess, not pushed out,
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or whatever it came out in October.
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And they posted some more videos too.
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So I just happen,
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stands to be like,
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hey, let me check and see if there's an update
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for my firmware.
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One of the features I'll say,
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I'm going to go back to my notes here,
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is, yeah, I talked about the caveats
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and divots between the firmwares.
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I think by default,
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it puts you on 7 now,
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and then, I guess,
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eventually they're going to push out 8 to people
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as a whatever,
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or maybe my UBK plug-in
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for Chrome is old or something,
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because there's a soft client,
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there's a thick client you can put on there
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to actually install it.
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And then there's a,
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you can just use a Chrome.
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So if you don't have local admin,
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you don't have to worry about installing anything,
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you can use a Chrome plug-in,
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because it's just,
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if I'm not mistaken,
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it's just Java.
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So what I did once today is,
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I downloaded the international firmware,
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I think,
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and I updated with that,
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and I think it was okay,
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but then I tried to push a restore,
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I tried to back up and push that back up
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to the old one,
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and it got a good fuse,
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or some vice versa.
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So I ended up,
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there was stuff in my thing,
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so when I pressed the button,
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it would type stuff,
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but it wasn't the password that I was expecting.
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So it was either there,
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because of the wrong firmware,
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or the wrong international,
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or the wrong firmware got pushed on there,
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or I have a wrong backup or restore,
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I don't know what happened,
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but essentially,
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if you have one working,
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you can always just backup,
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replace all your backups and whatever.
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Where you have a problem,
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is if you don't know what version,
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firmware,
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or whatever your key goes with,
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then you need to figure it out,
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and then reverse engineer it.
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So what I would say is that,
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in the future,
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is bundle your firmware
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with your backups,
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just in case,
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maybe even keep the old,
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all the firmwares that you've used,
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or patch to it.
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So just in case,
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you have to restore an old password,
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from an old firmware,
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that's no longer available,
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or whatever,
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there won't be any confusion,
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as to what firmware you use,
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when you packed it up.
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So, you know,
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I would go as far as to say,
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is to keep your backups
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with your firmware,
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that it's currently on there,
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and the right version,
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and say,
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I'm going to have to worry about it.
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Obviously,
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it'll figure it to your passphrase,
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is what I ended up doing,
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but luckily,
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I had the old new password,
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for Active Directory,
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and the different,
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are assigned to a different key,
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and I hadn't ruined that one yet,
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and I accidentally wiped the wrong,
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the wrong thing.
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So obviously, be careful,
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there's no prompts with this stuff.
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So if you hit the white key,
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and you wipe out your,
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you know, Active Directory password,
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or whatever,
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it's gone,
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you're done,
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and once you can restore it,
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which I couldn't do,
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and luckily, I remembered that,
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one of the keys,
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I had bounded and bind it to,
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to the new password,
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which would have been the new password for AD.
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I kind of looked out.
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So,
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so I have everything set on the two devices now,
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they're all set up.
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You can change the LED brightness.
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It's very bright,
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I think, eight by default.
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It's extremely bright by default.
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I might even just leave it on one for now
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and see how that works.
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In some instances,
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you know, you are outside,
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and I've actually had problems,
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being able to tell whether or not,
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you know,
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it's a key I'm pressing,
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because it's under the device.
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So, you basically have to cup your hand,
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under the device,
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to see if the LED is on or not.
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So, I would actually,
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you know,
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give it a try with a lower,
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with a lower brightness,
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because if you're walking around with it at night,
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it's really bright,
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like, freaking bright,
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and you're walking past somebody,
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and you'll be able to kind of have blinded.
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So, it's a really bright LED in there.
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The other feature I'll say that a data added
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is a quick setup guide,
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which basically,
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um,
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dumps out all the information you need.
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Okay, here's your password.
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Here's your key.
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Here's your pin.
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Here's your alternate pin.
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Here's your passphrase to back it up.
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Um,
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pair it up this document
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and keep it somewhere physically safe,
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and you don't have to do anything.
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It just works.
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Um,
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so that way,
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all your backups
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have the same issue.
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You don't have to worry about any of that.
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It's setting it up,
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or setting up in keys,
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or being complicated,
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because that's,
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that's kind of the feature I,
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that's kind of the thing,
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but say we're kind of missing,
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because,
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um, you know,
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doing the keys,
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and figuring out what firmware we had,
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or whatever it was kind of confusing.
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Um, so I think this quick setup
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might help people that just want to,
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want to make it go.
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Um, so that way,
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they could just print out this document,
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have their pins in there,
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and they have the alternate method,
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where you can enter the pin,
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and it won't actually save it to the screen.
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I think it just puts it in there,
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and you have to remember your pin, obviously.
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Um,
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so that's in those videos.
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Um,
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let's what else I'll say.
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Um,
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you'll also want to get,
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because if you're in a corporate environment,
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or wherever else,
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if you're doing something with your phone,
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guess what?
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You're going to want to authenticate
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through your phone, too.
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And,
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you don't necessarily want
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your core passwords,
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or master passwords,
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to be in something like a password safe,
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like, last pass.
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So,
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what you don't want to do is
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put your 2FA,
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or your,
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your only key passwords
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in your,
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in any of your,
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um,
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password managers,
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or whatever.
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So, the idea that,
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is if your password manager gets popped,
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then,
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and you have your only key,
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or your, you know,
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2FA token thing keys stuck in there,
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then, um,
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as somebody pops that,
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and they can get to your passwords for it,
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or, um,
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only key,
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physical device type of thing.
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So, I'm keeping,
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I keep in the last pass,
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stuff separate,
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then, um, my only key.
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So, that way,
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you know,
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my bank password
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is only on my brain,
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and only on the key,
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and it's only on the other key in the world.
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Um, so, that way,
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uh,
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there's no confusion as to, like,
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getting prompts,
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and password prompts,
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and stuff for,
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for, um,
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for hosts,
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and domains,
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and things that I don't want to save,
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anywhere,
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except for a physical device.
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Um,
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and if you're using, like, Android,
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um,
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every once in a while,
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you're going to have to re-authenticate,
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and guess what?
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If you don't know your 52 character password,
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I think it's 56 characters max or something.
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Um,
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if you don't know your 52 character password,
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then you're going to have to
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copy and paste it somewhere,
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out of somewhere,
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and then send it to yourself,
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and then paste it in,
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which is, obviously,
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the pizza purpose of the whole thing.
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So, um,
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what you can get is a little fog
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that, uh,
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starts to come with newer phones now,
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that transfer the USB-C
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to USB standard USB standard USB,
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so if you want to charge your phone
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through standard USB,
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you can do that.
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I think it's also designed
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for this specific case,
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so if you have a 2FA device,
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you can plug your little USB-C
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to, um,
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mail,
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or to female USB,
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plug it into the,
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the bottom there,
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and then you plug in the USB key,
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or the only key,
|
|
sorry,
|
|
and, um,
|
|
putting your password,
|
|
the problem,
|
|
or at least on this phone,
|
|
and the phone previous,
|
|
is that the LED
|
|
doesn't work,
|
|
and I guess it's because the voltage
|
|
or whatever,
|
|
I read something on my,
|
|
I assumed it wasn't,
|
|
excuse me,
|
|
I assumed it wasn't working,
|
|
but it's actually working,
|
|
but the voltage,
|
|
or something about the voltage,
|
|
or whatever.
|
|
Um,
|
|
so you just have to,
|
|
keep in mind that, you know,
|
|
type in your,
|
|
pin,
|
|
wait a few seconds,
|
|
and then press your thing,
|
|
and it'll pop right up.
|
|
Um,
|
|
I've also had issues with,
|
|
um,
|
|
oh, I mentioned the,
|
|
I know if I mentioned a lot of lock features,
|
|
so you can assign one of the keys,
|
|
it has to be the primary,
|
|
so I had to move some things around.
|
|
But, um,
|
|
I assigned, like,
|
|
the number 6 key,
|
|
to lock,
|
|
the workstation,
|
|
uh, window key L,
|
|
and then,
|
|
basically set the only key to, um,
|
|
like,
|
|
to pv key.
|
|
So,
|
|
I don't know how you're supposed to do it before,
|
|
but basically,
|
|
it has to take it with me.
|
|
So, I would walk off,
|
|
unplug the key,
|
|
and take it with me.
|
|
Now, you can just hit the lock key,
|
|
it'll lock your workstation,
|
|
and it will lock the,
|
|
uh, only key 2.
|
|
So, if you don't want to physically bring it with you,
|
|
you can just use that.
|
|
Um,
|
|
let's see,
|
|
what else?
|
|
Um,
|
|
the Android issues I talked about,
|
|
um,
|
|
I was talking about the features,
|
|
and there was one other thing I was going to bring up,
|
|
outside of the, uh,
|
|
locking feature,
|
|
there was another new feature,
|
|
um, oh, the keyboard speed.
|
|
So, it's always been around,
|
|
but the, you can,
|
|
you can set the speed of the keyboard,
|
|
a default,
|
|
like 8, or something like that,
|
|
8 or 4.
|
|
Um, which is pretty slow.
|
|
Now, what,
|
|
well, everything's first things there to do,
|
|
is put it all in,
|
|
all the way to 10,
|
|
which is almost instantaneous.
|
|
Um, seems to work everywhere,
|
|
except for I had Symantec,
|
|
um,
|
|
Symantec, uh,
|
|
drive encryption,
|
|
on a system,
|
|
and if it was
|
|
not booted
|
|
into the right thing,
|
|
or whatever,
|
|
um, the keyboard speed would be too fast.
|
|
So, I will, like,
|
|
when I disabled,
|
|
I think I disabled,
|
|
um, UEFI,
|
|
or disabled something in the BIOS,
|
|
like legacy support for USB,
|
|
or something like that.
|
|
Um, and it was able to pick it up after that,
|
|
but I had issues with speed.
|
|
So,
|
|
obviously keep that in mind,
|
|
if you've got things like RDP client,
|
|
or if you're doing remote desktop over,
|
|
remote desktop,
|
|
there's things like Sync Key Delays,
|
|
and, um,
|
|
if you ever end to Auto-Hot Key,
|
|
and Auto-IT scripts,
|
|
there's things like Sync Key Delays
|
|
and whole,
|
|
whole time values,
|
|
meaning,
|
|
if you just type out the password extremely fast,
|
|
that's not long enough sometimes,
|
|
for certain applications,
|
|
to pick up that you've actually registered,
|
|
and clicked,
|
|
that thing,
|
|
or,
|
|
typed that key.
|
|
So,
|
|
I don't even know if they have like a Sync Key Delay,
|
|
setting for the thing that tells you how long to hold the key down.
|
|
How many milliseconds hold the key down before it actually lifts up that key?
|
|
That's a key up value.
|
|
Um,
|
|
there's a DLL stuff you can do, like,
|
|
Sync Key event stuff for, um,
|
|
throughout Auto-Hot Key,
|
|
and you can do it straight up in Windows.
|
|
Um, anyways.
|
|
But, you'll find issues,
|
|
where you're already peed into a box,
|
|
you hit the thing,
|
|
and it goes,
|
|
and either the keys
|
|
are messed up somehow,
|
|
because the case gets screwed.
|
|
Um, I don't understand how or why it happens.
|
|
The only thing I can assume
|
|
is that the,
|
|
um,
|
|
is that it's typing it so quickly,
|
|
it changes the case.
|
|
So, meaning that,
|
|
if my password has an uppercase in it,
|
|
or a special character,
|
|
it's going to hit the special character,
|
|
and then stay in the lower case,
|
|
the uppercase for a while,
|
|
the caps lock basically,
|
|
the shift button,
|
|
for too long.
|
|
So, it hasn't sent
|
|
the key up
|
|
from the shift before it,
|
|
so if you're,
|
|
it's hard to explain,
|
|
but basically,
|
|
it's keeping the caps lock
|
|
or the shift key down too long,
|
|
and your password
|
|
is being a bunch of garble to you,
|
|
and it's not right.
|
|
So, um,
|
|
keep in mind that there are, you know,
|
|
some things that are limited,
|
|
uh, and you'll find,
|
|
that when you're working with this stuff,
|
|
the more time,
|
|
the more you use it,
|
|
the more weird things you'll find out about it,
|
|
um,
|
|
are some kind of limitations,
|
|
not to,
|
|
excuse me,
|
|
you be keys,
|
|
uh,
|
|
fail design,
|
|
it's just the way,
|
|
you know, people and applications
|
|
interpret,
|
|
um, keys,
|
|
and we start going faster than human,
|
|
um,
|
|
humans can type,
|
|
things get weird,
|
|
so,
|
|
I've had issues with RDP,
|
|
um,
|
|
and I've had to do silly stuff,
|
|
like, um,
|
|
have a auto-hot key script
|
|
that would pick up the odd,
|
|
pick up what I typed
|
|
in the box,
|
|
and then,
|
|
what I typed in the box
|
|
would be actually sent
|
|
through auto-key,
|
|
auto-hot key,
|
|
and then sent out
|
|
to, you know,
|
|
the screen buffer,
|
|
or the,
|
|
the send key buffer
|
|
through auto-hot key,
|
|
so that it would type
|
|
the right password.
|
|
Um,
|
|
um,
|
|
that's pretty much it,
|
|
as far as payloads,
|
|
I thought initially,
|
|
I could make it a teensy,
|
|
or a,
|
|
a USB,
|
|
but you could only put,
|
|
basically,
|
|
up to,
|
|
um,
|
|
it's like,
|
|
52 bytes,
|
|
or more,
|
|
52 characters,
|
|
and another 52,
|
|
and another 52,
|
|
so I think you could get,
|
|
that's about all you get,
|
|
which is roughly,
|
|
here,
|
|
like, 150 characters.
|
|
Um,
|
|
that's not enough for,
|
|
really any kind of payload,
|
|
um,
|
|
especially, like,
|
|
I'm not a piece of gated payload,
|
|
um,
|
|
the power shell,
|
|
or something.
|
|
Um,
|
|
that's pretty much it.
|
|
I like it,
|
|
I use it, um,
|
|
you know,
|
|
there are weird use cases,
|
|
like, for example,
|
|
if someone wants you to type
|
|
in your password into
|
|
something that doesn't,
|
|
oh, I need to easily type
|
|
in your password,
|
|
it's very painful,
|
|
um,
|
|
and that's where that,
|
|
that,
|
|
um,
|
|
that need,
|
|
or want,
|
|
is to take it,
|
|
and just throw it up into
|
|
last pass,
|
|
and that kind of beats the purpose,
|
|
so don't try not to do that,
|
|
um,
|
|
so,
|
|
for example,
|
|
uh,
|
|
you can always make sure you,
|
|
uh,
|
|
some kind of wireless device
|
|
for the touchscreen,
|
|
and I'm like,
|
|
I'm not going to put in
|
|
a 52-character password,
|
|
with, like, a tiny little LCD,
|
|
I'm, like,
|
|
some dumb printer,
|
|
or something,
|
|
like, I'm not going to,
|
|
first,
|
|
I don't trust that device,
|
|
the whole password,
|
|
safely,
|
|
anyways,
|
|
or the authentication
|
|
for that password,
|
|
anyways,
|
|
uh, probably class centered
|
|
over plain text,
|
|
somewhere,
|
|
anyways,
|
|
um,
|
|
secondly,
|
|
it's, you know,
|
|
just somebody out,
|
|
um, I've gotten
|
|
a UB keys before,
|
|
and given them away,
|
|
uh, only keys,
|
|
they're run about
|
|
40 bucks, I think,
|
|
and then, when it's all said
|
|
and done,
|
|
they're, like,
|
|
45 or something,
|
|
and then you buy two of them,
|
|
so you're,
|
|
spending 100 bucks on,
|
|
uh,
|
|
key fobs,
|
|
but, you know,
|
|
having a nice long password,
|
|
that no one can hack,
|
|
um,
|
|
and,
|
|
and funny,
|
|
I say that,
|
|
um,
|
|
that you actually used
|
|
a previous employer,
|
|
and the coworker was actually
|
|
able to crack it,
|
|
so, um,
|
|
keep in mind,
|
|
the password is,
|
|
uh, pseudo-random password,
|
|
it's not something that's a quote,
|
|
or, uh,
|
|
a string of,
|
|
known, uh,
|
|
character,
|
|
so you don't want to use,
|
|
obviously,
|
|
you don't want to use things
|
|
from a book,
|
|
but, you know,
|
|
you think that it's random enough,
|
|
but obviously,
|
|
it's not random enough,
|
|
if it's something
|
|
that's already been
|
|
written and printed,
|
|
and it's not,
|
|
you know,
|
|
random battery horse staple,
|
|
anyways,
|
|
I hope that helps you guys out.
|
|
Um, if you have any questions about
|
|
setup and stuff like that,
|
|
um,
|
|
I'll have the videos posted,
|
|
um, but,
|
|
if you have any problems with it,
|
|
or whatever need help,
|
|
set it up,
|
|
just let me know, um,
|
|
and, uh,
|
|
I can help you guys out,
|
|
but,
|
|
I like it,
|
|
I bought it one from my dad,
|
|
I don't know if he's,
|
|
used it,
|
|
but, uh, we'll see.
|
|
Appreciate it,
|
|
take it easy.
|
|
Music
|
|
You've been listening
|
|
to Hecker Public Radio
|
|
at Hecker Public Radio.org.
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We are a community podcast network
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that releases shows every weekday
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Today's show,
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like all our shows,
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Hecker Public Radio was founded
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If you have comments on today's show,
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please email the host directly,
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Thank you very much.
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