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CodePlay148y@stop yeah, I thought as much. Just need to convince others of my true intentions. I'm guessing people can be unsure if I start to hack? Even if it's my own hardware. -
stop65808yEven if "they" bring you to the court. As long you dont "steal" software and its your hardware(or the owner gave you the permission) you are innocent.
An unrealistic example: I hack into my homeserver because I forgotten the password. -
hateios1898yWrite basic c code. Set compiler to not optimize code. Compile it and debug it with inline asm instructions. You will see how c translates to asm.
And you can learn how loops are implemented, function prologue, epilouge and how stack management works. -
Defi4NT14878yIt's far fetched but it comes from good intentions
I'm currently deep into security as well specially working with malware atm, I have a few VM setup so I can test the effects of what I'm coding /finding / copy pasting from Internet on those without too much worry -
Wack61258yFirst things first: assembly. Use an assembly emulator and write simple things in it, that will teach you about how the basics work.
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Did you say security?
10 points for next century option.
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Recently I started to be interested in how code actually work. I do a for-loop or an if-statement but how do they actually work at the lowest level.
Another thing I've been interested in is security. I thought about learning how to hack my own systems in order to learn how to write more secure code and keep people out. But I'm a little afraid that as soon as I start look at how to hack, the police will storm through the window and take my computer 😂😂
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security