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294 points NotPractical | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.204s | source
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jordigh ◴[] No.41855104[source]
Where does Foone keep finding this stuff?

Earlier, Foone finds a NUC:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41294585

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raffraffraff ◴[] No.41856364[source]
I know an employee in an IT company. He told me that they have hundreds of decommissioned laptops and no time to wipe them. And they won't pay someone else to do it because it's too expensive. So right now they are in storage. If they go bust, the storage company will likely dump them.

I've seen a lot of stuff in e-waste. There are several facilities within 5 miles of my home, and you can walk right in and drop off your old TVs, toasters and laptops in large metal bins. And if you have a quiet word with the attendant you can usually walk off with stuff that someone else dropped off. "Good for the environment mate! I can use this for parts!"

If social engineering works at banks, you can be damn sure it works at an e-waste facility. And if that fails, a few bank notes help.

I don't do this but I have intercepted e-waste coming from family and friends. In one case I found a treasure trove of photos from my deceased sister. Nobody had ever seen them before. I also found personal documents, internet history and saved passwords in the browser, which got me into her iCloud account which, until then, nobody could access. This lead to more photos and documents. And it was all destined for e-waste.

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1. cpach ◴[] No.41856796[source]
Hopefully that company had enabled FDE on those laptops. (It still would be prudent to wipe them before recycling, of course.)