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#pin

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I was weak, when looking up hardcore pins on eBay I found a lot that had 12 entirely of bands I'm a fan of: Husker Du, Germs, Adolescents, Dead Kennedys, Black Flag, TSOL, DOA, Minor Threat, Bad Brains, Agent Orange, Circle Jerks, and Suicidal Tendencies. I'm gonna rock the hell out of these.

#pin#hardcore#punk
Replied in thread

@shufflecake

Would love to see that feature on #Mobian/#Phosh:

Enter regular #PIN: Unlock.

Enter emergency PIN: Device wiped (factory reset).

Enter guest PIN: Device unlocked for guest users.

Enter control PIN: Same as above, but everything happening on and around the device is streamed encrypted to a NAS. E.g. for toxic partners or toxic border control.

Now just remember the four PINs and don't confuse them!

Neues Feature in der GLS Banking App: Wunsch-PIN für Deine Kreditkarte! 💳
Ab sofort kannst Du in der GLS Banking App ganz einfach Deine persönliche Wunsch-PIN für Deine Kreditkarte festlegen.
So einfach geht’s: 💡
1️⃣ GLS Banking App öffnen
2️⃣ Menü unten rechts: „Karten“ auswählen
3️⃣ Deine Kreditkarte anklicken
4️⃣ „Wunsch-PIN vergeben“ auswählen
5️⃣ Wunsch-PIN eingeben
6️⃣ Mit SecureGo plus App bestätigen – fertig!
Deine neue PIN ist sofort aktiv.
#PIN #GLSBank

Replied in thread

@TheBat

Brilliant! I wish my #bank 's #ATM was like this!

Right now, I have to cover my PIN-entering hand with my other hand, and then do a whole bunch of fake button presses, in order to hopefully confuse any hidden cameras. Hopefully. Maybe. It's absolutely maddening, and it probably isn't actually secure because real button presses require more force than fake ones.

If only the keypad was randomized like this, entering my #PIN securely would be easy. 😭

The towpath here gets little use, so the ground is very soft, not compacted. To tie up the boat, I was able to sink mooring pins into the ground with a few taps and then just by stepping on them.

When passing boats go by, the water displacement pulls at moored boats. This may pull the pins loose, out of the ground, and set the boat adrift in the canal.

If that happens, I hope I'm awake, and that it's not raining.

Replied in thread

@hisold My bank stopped issuing #girocard cards with #magstrip 10+ years ago as magstrip was phased out and #NFC was phased in as well as #PSD1 being introduced.

  • Even before that merchants rarely accepted magstrips and those who did asked for #ID as soon as purchases [i.e. fuel at a gas station) exceeded like €100 because unlike #Chip + #PIN the payment processor does not guarantee them that the payment will be accepted and the amount guaranteed.

That's the main push factor: Alongside lower processing fees and faster processing, the Chip+PIN & #NFC systems actually request a blockage of the amount and will automatically decline without incuring fees if the balance / limit is below that amount - sometimes even before the PIN has been entered (it'll just not show it until the PIN is entered so fraudsters can't just abuse this as a means to check balance.

  • There's a nice podcast with #JohnBoseak where he explains how stuff used to [and allegeldy still does] work in the #USA re: #CreditCards. Given that I worked for a #PaymentProcessor in the past this is some basic knowledge re: #security, because one needs to understand how stuff like CNP ("Card not Present") works and how the system is architected to the point that even if someone were to hack the database of said payment processor, they'd never find any CCs or the CVVs stored there at all.

It's also insightful because #fraud would be way more rampant if the card issuer, payment processor and card system operator [i.e. AMEX, VISA, MasterCard] didn't all run their own AFE [Anti-Fraud Engine] each automatically assessing risks within less than a second for every transaction.

  • That's why one can get their #CC blocked when using a #VPN and why fraudsters need the location of their victims because if I had a CC and used it regularly and someone were to try to swipe a skilled copy of that at a Walmart or Best Buy on the East Coast of the USA less than 24 hours of my last use in Germany, that would automatically get declined as fraud and the person at the cashier will call security because noone is travelling that quickly that far.

But that's just some cold OSINT based off #TechSupport and peeking behind the curtains professionally...

  • There's way more but I can't go into details on that.

Rest assured if you have a CC you can be as certain that someone tried to abuse it as I'm certain my bank blocked fraudulent money orders against my account because of AFEs working - it's just > 99% of all fraud attempts get blocked instantly and merchants rate-limited or kicked off the system when they do something suspicious.

  • Same reason why one can't frame someone for a crime by just wiring obviously illicit funds to their account: AML (Anti-Money Laundering) will catch that and unless the account holder were to ask "Where's the money/transaction?" #FinCEN et. al. won't even bother calling the account holder up simply because "oops I wired money to the wrong account. Can you please send it back?"- #scam is a well-known method to turn unsuspecting people into money launderers.

So yeah, that "#magstrip" may be just lacquer but unless it's specifically advertised otherwise only holds the CC & CVV as well as service codes [i.e. chip+pin only] to tell the terminal "Don't accept magstrip, mandate Chip+PIN"]...

  • Outside the #USA, this is the norm due to #PSD2 exceeding #PCIDSS by quite a lot!

Only underdeveloped countries like the #US still use #Magstrips and #credit and not Chip+PIN & #debit!

While driving a mooring pin into the ground, the mallet's head separated from the handle. This bank is quite hard — no chance of pounding in a pin just by holding the head in my hand. Those would be love taps.

When I went to a nearby boat to ask to borrow their mallet, I noticed they were tied to rings, with more rings ahead of them.

So I moved the boat up to the rings, of course.

But I do need a new mallet.

Searching for advice from security experts.

What is recommended for unlocking a device - biometric or long PIN/password?

Long PIN/password is secure against if someone holds you down and forces you to lock at the phone, but it's not as secure against shoulder surfing.

Biometric is secure against shoulder surfing, but it can have false positives. It's more convenient than going PIN/password.

🧐🤷🏼‍♂️

#AskFedi #Security #iPhone #MacBook #PIN #Password #Passwords #Biometric #Infosec