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Twitter user hacks 50k printers to tell people to subscribe to PewDiePie (zdnet.com)
130 points by smacktoward on Dec 1, 2018 | hide | past | favorite | 76 comments



The April Fool's joke that nearly got me fired was a combination of easily accessible JetAdmin ports, an HP control sequence, a script to find every JetAdmin on the internal network and a distinct lack of common sense. But it was so worth it. So worth it.


Many years a go in college, on some course one guy created a postscript file that when printed reprogrammed HP printer(s?) of the time to add one (1) zero to every number on documents that were subsequently printed.


All fun and games until you accidentally commit fraud.


> accidentally commit fraud.

That isn't a thing. Fraud is deliberate deception. You can not commit accidental deliberate deception.


True, but you can still be found guilty of fraud even so.


If you sent an old DEC band printer a bunch of form feeds, the tractor feed paper would shoot out about 10 feet. Fun to time it when someone walked behind the printer.


We had a co-worker that would mess with that stuff. He would change the text to say things like "Free cats inside" and "Insert clear paper." I took a bunch of pictures on my Treo650, but they are archived right now.


I miss the Treo...


Was that the control sequence that changed the text on the printer's character LCD screen?


Yep, the one changing the "ready" message.


I worked for a smaller company for a few years, as one of only two sysadmins. We used to regularly mess about with the messages on the printers, see how long it took people to notice.

I started out with the almost obligatory "Out of Cheese Error"


The only thing surprising about this is that these printers hadn't already printed enough random garbage to get disconnected/firewalled off from the internet.

The number of printers from a simple search [1] that have no authentication is staggering.

[1] https://www.shodan.io/search?query=printer


That was astounding already 20 years ago. Fax spam was out of control then to such a degree that Congress roused itself to pass legislation with teeth, yet it occurred to no one to send printer spam. The only thing that would connect to our printers was viruses, the probable target was port 631 with buggy CUPS or other LPD daemon behind, because every few hours the printer would run off a page with just a few gibberish letters.


I thought Twitter might somehow be pertinent to the hack but, apparently, this person just happens to have a Twitter account.


"Hacked" = people left their printers open to the internet.


Indeed - according to that definition I was basically the real world zero cool as a kid.


Identical actions of another can result in my car being stolen whether I leave it locked or unlocked.


> The same action of another can result in my car being stolen whether I leave it locked or unlocked.

Taking advantage of a car being unlocked involves completely different actions than with a locked car, so no, not at all. (And as far as stealing the car goes, a non-hack involves leaving the keys in it too.)

If you walked through an open door to steal something, it won't be "breaking and entering" either.


It would be burgulary instead of breaking and entering. You still get charged, just like accessing a computer unlawfully doesn't have to involve clever tricks to be illegal.


That’s criminal trespass. Accessing something not yours, when the owner has some expectation of you not accessing it, even if easy to do, is often illegal.

Owners not locking goods down does not give another the right to access.


Yep! And nobody should accuse you of picking the lock!


arkadiyt may be objecting to the dramatic use of "hack".

If Wells Fargo left an unsecured and sensitive DB exposed over the web, I would also object to a narrative of how people "hacked into Wells Fargo".


That was my point too, for what it's worth.


Sure, but that doesn't mean that it was "hacked", either.

This is lots closer to calling unlisted telephones.


Printing one sheet costs around $0.15. The 50,000 he printed likely cost his targets a total of $7500. That’s second degree felony grand theft territory. Good luck.


Can prosecutors aggregate the value of damage across thousands of unrelated victims for the purpose of charging grand theft? My gut says this is probably not the way it works, but I’m curious if others know more.

As a side note, I don’t think what he did can be charged as theft, technically speaking, because theft laws generally require the perpetrator to take property from the victim.

This case would be destruction of property or vandalism, if my memory of law school serves. And I don’t think there are grand versions of those crimes, at any rate.


If I stole a penny from millions of people do you think I'd be charged for stealing a penny?

Yes, this is how it would be charged.

>because theft laws generally require the perpetrator to take property from the victim.

If I sent a penny from millions of people to another person, would I be innocent of crime?

If I burned up money in another person's safe, would I be innocent?

The law will look at the damage to the victim(s), in aggregate. That the person causing the losses only hurts each a little or doesn't end up with goods is irrelevant.

Besides the normal value of goods laws, there are even tougher computer fraud and abuse type laws. Those could really cost him if some prosecutor decided to pursue those. I suspect there are Feds right now looking at this case and how to proceed.

Personally I don't want to see this person get prison for a felony, but perhaps charging him with it will make him or others think twice about such behavior next time. Community service or such would be a good outcome.


That's still ~orthogonal to "hacked". Even if, in fact, it's illegal to print to a misconfigured printer.


I don't think it is a big deal and hope no one gets charged. But you are using up resources, both ink and the time it takes to stop the printer from printing 100 pages of garbage, which could be non-trivial and disrupt important business functions. So I think it's a bit more malicious than calling unlisted telephones.

Oddly, I think calling unlisted telephones is more morally opposable than printing on random printers. So there are clearly two different ideals in my brain dueling for relevancy...


True. And this was auto-dialing 50K of them, and leaving a ~commercial message. But on the other hand, it wasn't printing solid black pages until the paper ran out. Which is what some jerk did to my fax machine, some decades ago ;)


Is more like having an autodialler deliver unsolicited marketing calls on mass and somehow managing to reverse the charges on each call.


Yes and while it would be correct to say your car has been stolen if you left it unlocked, you would have had been negligent.


But you wouldn't say that I picked your lock if you had left it unlocked.


Never new that guy was so popular... I don’t really understand why. But damn that’s some dedication by fans to boost his subscriber count...


It’s really silly to ruin your life with a criminal record like this, but at least the guy did something useful with his fandom. A lot of kids on YouTube are just watching, wasting away.


A lot of (adults) on (Netflix) are just watching, wasting away.


A lot of (people) on (television) are just watching, wasting away.

So at the end of the day we learned that nothing ever really changed.


My mother objected to me spending too much time reading and not enough outside.

I imagine there were people in the stone age that objected to people wasting too much time near the fire and not enough fighting with sabertooth tigers.


Exactly that! When I was living on the street, we used to call the fire "stoneage-tv". Because the human brains have such a long history of staring "into" the fire, I have the mild suspicion, that reading on e-ink displays without a backlight might make it less likely to get lost in thoughts, than when staring on a "glowing" screen. Unfortunately the only competetive screens are still rather expensive (paperlike)..

..damn, I got lost in offtopic thoughts again! ; )


It's an interesting thought! If you had a Twitter account in your bio, I would have followed it.


I don't think a parent encouraging their kid to have a little balance in their life is necessarily a bad thing.


His popularity is a combination of things, it started with his obscene reactions to horror games, then he became the most subscribed channel and that made him the defacto king of YouTube which made him even more popular, than he kept getting into controversies which made him even more popular and now he has a massive influence on the meme market which is keeping him popular.


he's also the most reliable youtuber imo, come rain or shine he uploads content that is consistently interesting. i follow all of the major "one person" channels on youtube and they all fall behind his metric


More so just the teenage angst driving a 19 year old to leave his mark on the world with a public prank


I work at a large printer company - similar name to a famous fantasy novel series. I have joked for ages about "Denial of Ink and Paper" attacks. To co-workers: I told you so.


It's even got a Wikipedia entry! https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_fax


A number of years back, I was trying to learn about network programming and SQL and decided to try and build a a kind of randomized port scanner that would generate IP addresses randomly, then scan semi-random ports on those that were pingable, and finally store the results in a database.

I quickly found a couple (not a lot, but I was kind of shocked to find any) of printers that were totally exposed to the Internet. While I can proudly say I even resisted the temptation to make them print out something clever like "Wer das liest, ist doof", I figured it was only a matter of time before somebody with less self-restraint would come along.

At work, all our printers still respond to the default passwords one can so easily find on the Internet, but at least they are not reachable from the outside. Printers are not considered a security problem, because once someone is on our internal network, they could do much worse things.

But still, exposing them to random people on the Internet is begging for something like this to happen.


I am really surprised these kinds of printer "hacks" are still possible in 2018.


Are you kidding? IoT stuff doesn't have any security either, and it wasn't invented 100 years ago.


True although there are previous technologies enabling home appliances to be connected and controlled from outside through radio and telephone couplers. X10 which dates back to the mid 70s is probably the most famous one. Back then there were no such things as encryption protocols: if someone knew your air conditioner was connected to your phone line he could turn it on just by phoning to your home and sending the right tone over the line. Hacking was just a matter of time spent finding the right frequencies; no firewall to prevent anyone from trying a thousand times until someone would hopefully notice and pull the cord. Despite those "vulnerabilities" though, I never heard about abusing other peoples devices. I would be interested in hearing experiences from actual owners (or hackers:) of those old systems.


I'm sure much of the software running on the printer is older than I am, no matter how new the printer itself is.


Why are you so surprised?


In this day and age I would've expected any non-secured printer to be flooded by spam on a continuous basis, to the point where they have to be secured if you don't want them to run out of paper printing spam every single day.

I'm surprised that these companies managed to get by with non-secure printers without being overwhelmed by spam.


Anybody have any idea if bots (or fake accounts) are involved in increasing the subscription count?


I've heard of rumours of T-Series, the challenger, got their subscribers count steadily moving up when YouTube was down globally earlier this month, which indicates botting, but what do we know? It's all foggy under Google's algorithms.

[0] https://mobile.twitter.com/socialblade/status/10523754246160...


Most of T-Series' subscribers come from people creating accounts in India and getting automatically subscribed to T-Series by YouTube's algorithms.

YouTube did this a while back with other demographics. For instance, CaptainSparklez often mentions this as one of the reasons why he became big; i.e. YouTube was autosubscribing folks to certain creators.

EDIT: If I recall correctly, when you create a new YouTube account, they give you a list of channel suggestions that you can check off to bootstrap you into suggestions based on your preferences, so this could be that, meaning people just "select all".


One Pewdiepie fan created a USB device that automatically unsubscribes from T-Series when plugged in: https://www.reddit.com/r/PewdiepieSubmissions/comments/a0ldp...

Here's one that auto-subscribes to Pewdiepie: https://www.reddit.com/r/PewdiepieSubmissions/comments/a0wcd...

Source code: https://github.com/Alone2/SubscribeToPewdsScript/blob/master...


Usually they are automatically checked off, and you have to manually uncheck every single one. Almost the same thing.


Someone also mentioned that PewDiePie was also gaining subscribers at the same time[1]. Either both of them were using bots or maybe Socialblade is not that accurate. I think something else is the reason behind it as others have pointed out.

1. https://twitter.com/sergevanred/status/1052381733172244480/


I doubt it, they've been around since 2006 and they're a very big label in India. It makes sense.


How was this done? I think of Twitter messages as something you can view in the app or browser. How can you send a message to the printer from there? Can someone please explain.


Try reading the story and not just the headline.


Many organizations are in dire need of departmental NAT firewalls and VPN solutions. I had to beg, bitch and moan before a Pac10 uni would offer such a service to protect our users.


Actually all it takes is a firewall. As far as hiding hosts goes, a firewall is just as good as NAT. And then if you do need a host or two accessible, the firewall is easier to change than the NAT.


What would they need NAT for?


If I was subscribed to that guys YouTube channel (which I'm not, since the guy is an idiot), someone pulling a stunt like this would probably prompt me to unsubscribe.


ah distinct IP's that can not be distinguished as proxies. suppose this goes to the iot as apposed to zombie computers.


We all know youtubers will go to any length to grab subscribers but the way pewdiepie is doing the campaign has left a very bad taste.

He started to drag India and even released a diss track, made it look like its T-Series/India vs rest of the world. I think its a deliberate ploy to drag India since he can pull more subscribers that way. There are lot of live count stream tracking the subscribers between pewdiepie vs T-Series. On the chat i could see lot of hate from these kids like lets beat up Indian kids on school & lot of ethnic hate. I know these are something you can't avoid in Internet and best to ignore. But i can't help but feel bad for Indian kids living abroad since most of his subscribers are kids/teens and they can be easily influenced by these sort of campaigns.

We can't blame pewdiepie nor expect him to act mature even though he has more than 70 million subscribers. But youtube needs to have some sort of policy on subscriber campaigns to avoid these type of scenarios. If not for all at least for influential youtubers.


It's quite obvious after watching his videos that the 'campaign' is just a joke. Felix and his subscribers know that he will inevitably lose the top spot on Youtube and they're just having some fun.

Majority of Felix's content is just satire and inside jokes. If you know Felix and his content, it's very obvious that the diss track is actually poking more fun at other Youtubers who make diss tracks unironically.

Here's a decent video by EmpLemon explaining the history of Pewdiepie's channel and where he is now: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1cvgoY0cmzk


He used to be all that but i don't think its the case off late. But i know his jokes are not for everyone so may be its not for me.

Thanks for the clarification and video.


It's largely perceived more as pewdiepie an independent creator vs Tseries a large faceless music label. Expecting this to cause ethnic hate seems far fetched. It's mostly about preventing youtube from being taken over by corporations.


I would love to support independent creators than corporations but wish he didn't hate the country the record label belonged to. Here is couple of lines from his diss track:

You tryna dethrone me from spot on number one But you India, you lose so best think you haven't won

> Tseries a large faceless music label

Just because you haven't heard doesn't mean its a faceless music label so please educate yourself. I am not a fan of this music label but bollywood produces more movies than hollywood and almost all of it are musicals. I am not in anyway saying bollywood is better but saying this just for the sheer volume.


He doesn't actually hate India, it's quite obviously a joke.


I have no idea what you’re saying, sorry.


With great power comes great responsibility and if that is not the case we need a system to keep it under check.


Good god. It's a joke.

> We can't blame pewdiepie nor expect him to act mature even though he has more than 70 million subscribers.

And apparently, he can't get some people to understand sarcasm or get a sense of humor.

> But youtube needs to have some sort of policy on subscriber campaigns to avoid these type of scenarios.

It's not a "campaign". It's a joke.

You would think someone one 'hacker'news would have a sense of humor or understand it at least, even if it isn't their style.




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