This is absolutely ridiculous. Imagine some fuckers just coming into your room while you’re with your SO making love or something.

  • Metz
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    A hotel confiscating random stuff would be considered theft and the hotel employees arrested in any civilized country.

  • henfredemarsEnglish
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    I was there. It was really weird. The people doing the inspections didn’t even know what they were looking for. What, a USB drive? It was clear to me that they had a very basic, normal persons understanding of technology.

    This was mainly motivated by the MGM hacks so they could show that they were doing something in case they got hacked later for liability.

  • thrawn
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    How fucking stupid.

    “Resorts World Las Vegas is dedicated at all times to ensuring a safe, secure, and comfortable environment for all of our valued guests, the statement begins.

    Resorts World said the latest policy was established “in light of recent events in Las Vegas, and the increasing ransomware threats to casinos and hotels on the Strip,

    Hard to see this absurd invasion of privacy as being for anything but that last bit. Hope this results in significantly fewer guests, but it feels like the vote-with-your-wallet part of capitalism stopped working some time ago.

    • dan1101
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      The ransomware threat is coming from INSIDE THE HOTEL!

      • ulternoEnglish
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        Room service now!! or kiss your data goodbye

    • Flyswat
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      I wouldn’t be surprised if somebody does end up pwning them with a ransomware out of spite.

    • sunzu2
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      Thank you for your service, good sir.

      This is the proper take here, IMHO

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    We have confiscated all the laptops we could find sir. They had a TERMINAL open. Filthy hackers!

      • shutz
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        But they were hacking all the IPs simultaneously!

          • some_guy
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            What are you talking about, that’s mine scumbag!

            Reminds me of the bash.org Napster entry. For posterity:

            #104052 + (14264) - [X]
            <NES> lol
            <NES> I download something from Napster
            <NES> And the same guy I downloaded it from starts downloading it from me when I'm done
            <NES> I message him and say "What are you doing? I just got that from you"
            <NES> "getting my song back fucker"
            
              • ulternoEnglish
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                Even better. If you are programming all networking H/W yourself, you can even ignore address conventions and reserved addresses.

    • t�mEnglish
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      “is that arch Linux?!

    • Possibly linuxEnglish
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      I can also imagine some talks getting disrupted after the speakers demonstration gets confiscated

  • CatZoomiesEnglish
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    Barges into room.

    Them: “Are you hacking, son?

    Me: “No.

    Them: “Cool. I’m just a hotel employee, and I only have understanding of computers at an end-user level. Plus, I see you’re not wearing a hoodie and sunglasses while being hunched over a laptop. Have a nice day and enjoy your stay at the Hilton!

  • anonymous111
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    People you dont want to piss off:

    1. Mother in-law
    2. Worlds greatest hackers
    3. The IRS
    • chingadera
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      For real, this convention has been around for a long time without issue, we should poke the bear.

    • Possibly linuxEnglish
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      They should boycott the hotel next time. I’m sure there are plenty of other places that would accept them

  • elgordino
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    All hotels reserve the right to inspect your room whenever they need to. The privacy sign just means you don’t want room service, it’s not some magical lock.

    They’d still knock, not just burst into your room to catch you in flagrante.

    That said seeing the black hat conference in this way is daft.

    • AstralPath
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      Not to mention the metal hook lock on most room doors I’ve seen that can prevent anyone from entering while you’re still inside.

      • gaylord_fartmaster
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        Every hotel with those has a tool they can use to easily unlatch that lock.

        • Zoot
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          I mean if you’re in the room you can atleast stop them from doing that rather easily.

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            I mean sure if you wedge the door or something, but then you’re just going to get kicked out.

            • Zoot
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              Or you just walk up to the person and say “Hey. I’m in here

                • Zoot
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                  Yeah, no where did it say they will walk in on your ass having sex. Maybe you should actually read the article.

  • Anon518English
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    Your title is terrible. Use the article’s title.

    • youmaynotknowOP
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      It’s not a title, it’s an opinion. Having said that, I agree, it’s terrible as a title. Fixed (I think).

    • lud
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      Agreed. I really dislike editorialised titles.

  • cmnyboEnglish
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    That sounds like a good way to get their employees shot.

  • NarrativeBear
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    I like to walk around with a open bathrobe, hope no one walks in.

  • Possibly linuxEnglish
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    That’s kind of silly honestly. I can see where they are coming from but the people at the conference are the good guys. If I were them I would get some of those security professionals to give suggestions on how to have better security. Also random room checks aren’t going to catch anything. Anyone who wants to cause harm isn’t going have such bad opsec. You will end up catching people with legitimate and highly dangerous stuff like routers, network switches and vacuum cleaners

    • gencha
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      Just FYI, you need very little skill to clone the WiFi access gateway of a hotel WiFi, and then blast their SSID from your router, to lure close guests into your honeypot. Once people are on your malicious gateway, the fun starts.

      In a hotel with hundreds of hackers on alcohol, it’s not unlikely for people to fuck around.

      There is also no requirement to be a “good guy” to attend the conference.

      • AAA
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        There is also no requirement to be a “good guy” to attend the conference.

        Correct. But it’s kind of the inevitable outcome that only “good guys” attend. Why would any bad actor go there and risk being exposed / caught

        • TheGalacticVoid
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          Defcon is a useful resource for networking and learning. It being run by and for good guys doesn’t mean bad guys don’t find the event useful. The vague risk of “getting caught” is probably worth taking, regardless of whether that risk is tangible, especially if they follow proper security practices.

        • gencha
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          In short, untreated mental illness

      • Maggoty
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        Isn’t also a game at defcon to spread a harmless package to as many devices as possible?

      • Possibly linuxEnglish
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        Hopefully that would get flagged. If you start broadcasting that will show up under rouge ap detection

        • gencha
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          Right. And then they locate it and search the rooms nearby. Exactly what their disclaimer is about

    • ulternoEnglish
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      vacuum cleaners

      Why would someone bring their own vacuum cleaner in a hotel room?