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Dear English speakers, there is a reason for the saying "Turning Pseudocode into Python is just a matter of correct indentation".
Python code reads very natural for an English speaker, just read what it does, use your eyes and you will see it does nothing, why go around asking others or trusting weird "virus detection" pages when you can use your own eyes to verify what this PoS does (i.e. nothing but printing some text).
The point is it wasn't necessary for a Python script that, among other things, doesn't do any file I/O.VirusTotal is actually trustworthy. I saw that malware researchers use it at times to identify various similarities (I think it was a researcher identifying a file).
The point is it wasn't necessary for a Python script that, among other things, doesn't do any file I/O.
print ("Hello, Homebrew.")
print ("Omnibreak v0.1 Developer")
print ("-------------------------")
code = input ("Enter Developer Key: ")
if code == "admin":
print("Welcome to Omnibreak HBL")
else:
print("Invalid Key")
runsploit = input("Run HBL? y/n: ")
if runsploit == "y":
print("Downloading...")
input("PRESS ENTER TO CLOSE")
else:
print("Turning off...")
I don't know Python very well, but this looks like pure crap
You have a very... interesting imaginationI had so much fun blasting these kids in the original "reveal", but really it should have died right there.
Even a dementia ridden chimp with cataracts the size of a polish satellite disc can tell all that python script does it print some bullshit text with options as worthless as a whore at a eunuchs choir practise..
I had so much fun blasting these kids in the original "reveal", but really it should have died right there.
Even a dementia ridden chimp with cataracts the size of a polish satellite disc can tell all that python script does it print some bullshit text with options as worthless as a whore at a eunuchs choir practise..
Bro, if they can't even make a fucking proper link I doubt they should brag about them knowing HTML.They didn't even bother hashing this "developer key", which I assume they don't want anyone to know. Very clearly it's a bunch of primary school kids who think they're 1337 hax0rs because they learned a bit of HTML and python
.us domains are like $2 per year (from a quick search), and I don't know much about web hosting but I'm pretty sure hosting a website accessible to others is as easy as ignoring your ISP's threats not to, flipping a bunch of settings in your router settings thingy and installing apacheBro, if they can't even make a fucking proper link I doubt they should brag about them knowing HTML.
By link I mean't like a link you click on. They couldn't simply do <a href="link">click here</a>, I can do that in like 5 seconds..us domains are like $2 per year (from a quick search), and I don't know much about web hosting but I'm pretty sure hosting a website accessible to others is as easy as ignoring your ISP's threats not to, flipping a bunch of settings in your router settings thingy and installing apache
It's just a "Output text to screen and wait for input" type of code.print ("Hello, Homebrew.")
print ("Omnibreak v0.1 Developer")
print ("-------------------------")
code = input ("Enter Developer Key: ")
if code == "admin":
print("Welcome to Omnibreak HBL")
else:
print("Invalid Key")
runsploit = input("Run HBL? y/n: ")
if runsploit == "y":
print("Downloading...")
input("PRESS ENTER TO CLOSE")
else:
print("Turning off...")
I don't know Python very well, but this looks like pure crap
oops misreadBy link I mean't like a link you click on. They couldn't simply do <a href="link">click here</a>, I can do that in like 5 seconds.