**Thesis:**
> Bitcoin will not die from technology or regulation, but from the fact that AI consumes the same fuel while promising a higher return.
Or, more polemically:
> Bitcoin burns electricity to cosplay as money.
> AI burns electricity to generate power.
Martin Seeger
Martin Seeger
masek_at_infosec.exchange@momostr.pink
npub1m7vx...zdpz
Working at front lines of the IT and having fun there. Been around the Internet since 1992 and still in awe what has become of that little baby. Currently wanted for repeated "Nerd Sniping" on all continents.
Personal interests:
- IT Security
- Computer Games & TTRPGs
- Cycling
- Cooking & Baking
- Books, Movies, TV-Series (mostly F&SF)
- Everything that blinks, has buttons to press and looks remotely gadgetoid
Everything i write, post, tweet, blog or blurp is just my personal opinion and is not the opinion or policy of my employer, my cat or my goldfish.
I post in English and German. Will try to mark each post correctly, but errors happen. Sorry for that.
I appologize if I am not following you back. This happens as my stream is already getting more posts than I can read.
Signal: https://signal.me/#eu/UCIZRNn72tPSdaqYa4KBK3UBwwJD0jYCP0A5FCTw8NO2nRujm6JJsKWa0hAIlM2Q
Threema: https://threema.id/RR6MJMU5
BLOG: https://blog.literarily-starved.com/
LC_LANG: en_EN, de_DE
Location: Euro
OH on a security conference: „English is the new executable“
Are you interested in testing your USB cables? Then I have a blog post for you:
Be aware: **You might discover that your cable is fooling your PC**


Literarily Starved
Technology: The (nearly) perfect USB cable tester does exist
Your USB cables may lie to your PC. Let me show you how to catch those.

A: How is your memory?
/me thinking of my 769 open tabs
RE:
I want to pitch in on what @npub1qqmv...v4e4 said in the attached post.
During my youth I was raised on a diet of U.S. culture: the Ponderosa Ranch felt as familiar as the bridge of the USS Enterprise.The good night to John boy was often also the signal for me that I had to go to bed now. From the moment I earned my own money, I started spending as many vacations in the United States as my budget allowed.
Most of the books I have read and I am reading have been written by U.S. authors. Most of the movies and TV series I see were made by Hollywood companies. A significant part of my verbal and written output is in a language different from my mother tongue.
Today I would say that my command of the English language, my knowledge of U.S. history and culture easily surpasses that of the current commander in chief.
But other than with Randahl, the cracks in the relationship started to show much earlier. When I came to the U.S. in October 2001, it felt like a different country. I no longer felt welcome and therefore no longer came visiting.
A friend of mine, who was working in the U.S. at that time and who was on his way to earning a U.S. citizenship was told by a border agent: "Shut up little shit, I can do with you whatever I want." His sin was to point out the regulations my friend knew much better than that agent. He terminated his job at the next occasion.
There were many such moments and every time, another fatigue fracture in my relationship to the United States appeared.
Trump is for me just the nail in the coffin. It is very big and tough nail, because he was elected a second time. Everyone knew what kind of man they elected. And they chose to do so nonetheless. I cannot and will not forget that.
I see the protests, I hear the voices of dissent but I also see the big passive masses, that accept what is happening. It is the same kind of silence my ancestors emitted when Hitler started his run.
Yes, I still have a lot of friends and other people in the U.S. I feel attached to and care a lot about. But for the country as a hole, I no longer give a damn fuck.
In my job "Pacta sunt servanda" is a very important phrase. I cannot do my work without trust.
**I am convinced that the current U.S. will not abide any contract, any agreement, any promise if the big orange baby doesn't see a personal advantage in it.** And I cannot have a relationship with someone I do not respect and trust.
It's as simple as that.
View quoted note →
Mastodon
Randahl Fink (@randahl@mastodon.social)
I don't know if Americans realize what happened between the US and Denmark.
No matter whom I listen to, the feeling is the same: Our bilateral rel...
/me finds an USB-Stick
"Looks old... Hm, let's see how big it is? 64 Megabyte? What shall I do with that?"
Literally 5min later an Email from Minisforum arrives.
> To fix your Ethernet problem please update your BIOS. Please put the following files (35MB) on a FAT32 formatted drive and follow these instructions ...
Never laugh at a 64MB Flash drive. This one just fixed my onboard Ethernet 😃.
A few hours ago, I was proud of me making it through the supermarket without buying sweets.
/me just now:


Im Sinne der Völkerverständigung bin ich bereit, dem Amerikanischen Präsidenten mein Seepferdchen inkl. Urkunde und Badehosen-Aufnäher abzutreten.
Hey U.S., please see:
https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/south-koreas-ex-president-yoon-faces-first-court-ruling-over-martial-law-2026-01-16/
Getting rid of a president sending troops against his own citizens is possible. And getting him into jail for his crime too...
I already mourned Scott Adams when he fell for the dark side (or better: when I noticed it). That is, when I felt a loss.
I was mostly a consultant in the early 90s. In that role I could tell a lot about a company and its problems just by looking which Dilbert comics were hanging in the offices or cubicles. I knew what to expect, so those comics really helped me in my job.
Those comics in the offices have mostly disappeared over the last decade as well.