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À partir d’avant-hierInformatique & geek

Deadpool & Wolverine : pas encore sorti, le film bat déjà un record

Deadpool Wolverine Record Bande Annonce

Il fallait s'y attendre, le retour du mercenaire à grande bouche a fait grand bruit lors de la diffusion de sa bande-annonce teaser. Deadpool & Wolverine offre un premier record à Marvel / Disney.

Arnaque bancaire téléphonique, la fin du spoofing à l’automne ?

Les arnaques bancaires passant par le téléphone vont-elles disparaitre à l'automne 2024 en France ? Les pirates ne pourront plus usurper les banques, par téléphone ? Explication....

Wade Wilson is kidnapped by the TVA in Deadpool and Wolverine teaser

Wade Wilson (Ryan Reynolds), aka Deadpool, is back to save the MCU: "I am Marvel Jesus."

After some rather lackluster performances at the box office over the last year or so, Marvel Studios has scaled back its MCU offerings for 2024. We're getting just one: Deadpool and Wolverine. Maybe one is all we need. Marvel released a two-minute teaser during yesterday's Super Bowl. And if this is the future of the MCU, count us in. The teaser has already racked up more than 12 million views on YouTube, and deservedly so. It has the cheeky irreverence that made audiences embrace Ryan Reynold's R-rated superhero in the first place, plus a glimpse of Hugh Jackman's Wolverine—or rather, his distinctive shadow. And yes, Marvel is retaining that R rating—a big step given that all the prior MCU films have been resoundingly PG-13.

(Some spoilers for the first two films below.)

Reynolds famously made his first foray into big-screen superhero movies in 2011's The Green Lantern, which was a box office disappointment and not especially good. But he found the perfect fit with 2016's Deadpool, starring as Wade Wilson, a former Canadian special forces operative (dishonorably discharged) who develops regenerative healing powers that heal his cancer but leave him permanently disfigured with scars all over his body. Wade decides to become a masked vigilante, turning down an invitation to join the X-Men and abandon his bad-boy ways.

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Deadpool & Wolverine : les 9 détails cachés (ou non) que vous avez pu manquer dans le teaser

Le premier teaser de Deadpool & Wolverine est sorti. L'occasion de décortiquer la bande-annonce, en attendant le film, prévu pour l'été 2024. Voici 9 détails à noter. Certains seront évidents, d'autres beaucoup moins.

Deadpool & Wolverine, La Planète des Singes… : tous les trailers du Super Bowl

Comme le veut la tradition, le mois de février débute par le Super Bowl, la grande finale de NFL suivie par le monde entier. L'occasion de découvrir des bandes-annonces. Cette année, la star, c'est Deadpool (et un peu Wolverine).

Dune 2, Megalopolis, Deadpool 3 : les 15 films qu’on attend le plus en 2024

Dune 2

De la science-fiction, du fantastique, du superhéros, de l'étrange : voilà ce qui vous attend au cinéma en 2024, mais aussi sur certaines plateformes de streaming comme Netflix.

Marvel sens dessus dessous : nouvelle date pour Deadpool 3

Par : Julie Hay

Marvel Deadpool 2024 Sortie

La fin du mouvement qui a paralysé Hollywood pendant quatre mois signe le début des retards chez Marvel. C'est une première en dix ans, il n'y aura qu'un seul film du MCU au cinéma en 2024.

Marvel sens dessus dessous : nouvelle date pour Deadpool 3

Deadpool 3 n’oubliera pas la saga X-Men de la Fox

Par : Julie Hay

Hugh Jackman dans la peau de Wolverine

En invitant Wolverine, Deadpool 3 fera-t-il office de soft reboot à l'univers des X-Men ?

Deadpool 3 n’oubliera pas la saga X-Men de la Fox

Nouvelles Régulations sur le Démarchage Téléphonique : Une Aube Nouvelle pour les Consommateurs ?

Le démarchage téléphonique est un moyen courant pour les entreprises d'atteindre leurs clients potentiels. Cependant, la réalité pour beaucoup de consommateurs est que ces appels peuvent être envahissants, inopportuns, et parfois frauduleux. Ce 25 juillet, nouvelles règles pour les opérateurs....

Le créateur d’iSpoof condamné à 13 ans de prison pour une fraude massive au Royaume-Uni

Un tribunal britannique a prononcé une peine de 13 ans et 4 mois de prison à l'encontre de Tejay Fletcher, le créateur du service de proxy téléphonique iSpoof. Cette condamnation fait suite à une vaste fraude qui a permis le vol de millions de dollars à travers d'appels trompeurs....

Automatiser les installations de Kali pour les pentesters qui ont la flemme

Par : Korben

Vous le savez, Kali est un Linux spécialisé pour la cybersécurité, qui permet de faire de l’analyse de vulnérabilité, du test d’intrusion, de l’analyse de paquets réseau, du reverse engineering et tout un tas d’autres trucs. Si vous êtes un pentester, vous l’utilisez probablement et vous savez que la création de VM Kali Linux pour chaque mission peut être une tâche un poil relou !

Heureusement, un nouveau projet open source baptisé Kali-automation-install va vous faciliter grandement la vie. Cet outil permet en effet de créer automatiquement une VM Kali Linux avec tous les outils nécessaires pré-installés dessus, le tout en utilisant un simple script bash qui peut être rapidement et facilement modifié. Cela permet de répondre à vos besoins spécifiques sur chacune de vos missions d’expert ;-).

Logo de Kali Linux, une distribution de pentesting basée sur Debian

Ce projet a été développé par sKillseries, un habitué du monde offensif cyber et permet aussi de configurer Kali en français pour qu’il fonctionne avec les deux hyperviseurs les plus courants : VirtualBox et VMware.

Pour l’utiliser, vous devrez d’abord installer packer ainsi que l’hyperviseur de votre choix (J’ai choisi Virtualbox pour l’exemple).

apt install packer virtualbox virtuabox-ext-pack

Ensuite, vous pouvez modifier les variables qui sont dans le fichier kali-var.json pour personnaliser votre VM Kali Linux.

{
    "iso_url": "<Lien de Téléchargement Kali-Linux>",
    "iso_checksum": "<SHA256Checksum de l'ISO>
}

Enfin, une fois ces modifications faites, vous pourrez initier la création de la VM avec une seule commande directement depuis votre terminal ou vos propres scripts.

packer build -var-file=kali-vars.json config-virtualbox.json

Vous pouvez même le faire en mode headless si vous le souhaitez (sans interaction) en ajoutant le paramètre suivant au fichier json de votre hyperviseur.

"headless": "1",

Vous trouverez toutes les infos sur ce projet sur sa page Github.

Le gestionnaire d’un blackmarket condamné à 3 ans de prison

Un cybercriminel bien connu, fondateur du blackmarket iChop, condamné à trois ans de prison pour le commerce de données personnelles volées....

Des spoofers se font spaaf par la spooflice !

Plus de 100 personnes arrêtées dans une opération internationale à l'encontre du site web pirate Ispoof. Les hackers malveillants auraient fait perdre plus de 100 millions de dollars à leurs victimes....

Quick Fix — a vending machine for likes and followers

Par : Liz Upton

Sometimes we come across a project that just scores a perfect 10 on all fronts. This is one of them: an art installation using Raspberry Pi that has something interesting to say, does it elegantly, and is implemented beautifully (nothing presses our buttons like a make that’s got a professionally glossy finish like this).

Quick Fix is a vending machine (and art installation) that sells social media likes and followers. Drop in a coin, enter your social media account name, and an army of fake accounts will like or follow you. I’ll leave the social commentary to you. Here’s a video from the maker, Dries Depoorter:

Quick Fix – the vending machine selling likes and followers

Quick Fix in an interactive installation by Dries Depoorter. The artwork makes it possible to buy followers or likes in just a few seconds. For a few euros you already have 200 of likes on Instagram. “Quick Fix “is easy to use. Choose your product, pay and fill in your social media username.

There’s a Raspberry Pi 3B+ in there, along with an Arduino, powering a coin acceptor and some I2C LCD screens. Then there’s a stainless steel heavy-duty keyboard, which we’re lusting after (a spot of Googling unearthed this, which appears to be the same thing, if you’re in the market for a panel-mounted beast of a keyboard).

This piece was commissioned by Pixelache, a cultural association from Helsinki, whose work looks absolutely fascinating if you’ve got a few minutes to browse. Thanks to them and to Dries Depoorter — I have a feeling this won’t be the last of his projects we’re going to feature here.

The post Quick Fix — a vending machine for likes and followers appeared first on Raspberry Pi.

Liverpool MakeFest | HackSpace magazine #19

The news that UK Maker Faire was to shut its doors came as a bit of a surprise to many. This vibrant weekend of makers meeting, sharing, and learning was absolutely brilliant, and left us fizzing with ideas after our visits there. We’re sad that it’s gone.

Makers being makers though, if there’s demand, it will be filled. And that’s exactly what’s happening in Liverpool with Liverpool MakeFest. On 29 June 2019, the MakeFest will hold its fifth iteration. This is the UK’s biggest free maker event, attracting thousands of visitors, and its vision of a free, maker-focused festival is spreading far and wide.

We visited the mid-Victorian splendour of Liverpool Central Library, the home of MakeFest, to talk to the founders — Denise Jones, Mark Feltham, and Caroline Keep — to find out what makes this event special.

Liverpool MakeFest 2019 is taking place at the Central Library, Saturday 29 June 2019, and it’s completely free to attend

HackSpace magazine: Hello! Thanks for having us over here. How did the three of you come together to start Liverpool MakeFest?

Caroline Keep: I was a geotechnical engineer, Mark’s an academic, and Denise is a librarian. We bumped into each other watching a workshop in lantern making. Mark had all the academic experience. When I came to work with Mark on his makerspace, I was the geeky maker — he didn’t even have a smartphone at that time. I got the education bug and then moved into secondary school teaching.

Mark Feltham: It all started over there, as a chance meeting. We bumped into each other and got chatting. Within six weeks, we’d filled the library. We thought it would be a one-off, but since then it’s taken off.

Caroline is the reigning TES New Teacher Of The Year

HS: So no business plan, no franchising fees, no world domination?

CK: We’ve just winged it. We made all the banners, bunting. The first year my PGCE fund paid for MakeFest! This building reopened again in 2013, and in 2014 we were lucky that they were running a programme of events and initiatives to make it a really vibrant building, so it was the right time as well. We thought we’d have a little room off to the side and get maybe six tables. We’d already done a Mini Maker Faire, and we’ve always been good friends with [local makerspace] DoES Liverpool, so we were confident we’d get at least a few people turning up. And in six weeks we were full.

MF: We pulled the first one off, we’re talking the first three floors of the library and 60 makers, for £850. And that included feeding them and making badges as well.

One of the spin-offs that have come out of MakeFest is Little Sandboxes, which takes making out to deprived areas of the city

HS: For context, this building is huge. It’s bigger than most libraries; it’s probably about the same size as the Life Centre in Newcastle, where UK Maker Faire was held until recently. It must have helped to have a librarian on board to negotiate with the powers that be?

Denise Jones: I had to sell it to the people in charge back then, which were the head of service and the manager of this building. The Department for Culture, Media and Sport has a Taskforce for Libraries, which is funded until next year. We’re close to finishing the national guidance now for the Taskforce — the idea is to get one of these [MakeFests] in every library. We wanted the guidance doc to be inclusive of museums and libraries, because we knew that Manchester had opted to put their MakeFest in a museum. We’ve got Chester and Stoke MakeFest, and there’s one in the pipeline in Wrexham. We were having the same conversations over and over again, so we decided to write a document: how to run a MakeFest.

Liverpool Central Library was renovated a few years ago — the precious books went into temporary storage in a salt mine in Cheshire to keep them dry

HS: What have we got to look forward to this year and beyond?

CK: That’s a good question. We’ve got some corking stuff coming this year. We’ve given it the theme ’Space and time – creativity in the making’. We’ve got events planned for the Apollo anniversary, and [just] before MakeFest we’re going to kick off with a music day, showing people how to make music, and making the instruments to make music. That’s another spin-off that’s come out of MakeFest: the MakerNoise Unconference at Edge Hill University.

MF: We’ve always felt that we hold MakeFest in trust for makers. In terms of where it goes long-term, I don’t see it ever becoming more than a one-day event here, because one day is good. It gives people Sunday to get over things, and get home because they have day jobs on a Monday. We’re always very sensitive to that, we don’t want to take up too much of people’s time. The other thing is that I don’t see it spilling out into a bigger building; it’s always going to be in the library. But the way to grow it is to put it in other libraries. Not to make this one, Liverpool, bigger and take over. Then each maker community gets its own feel, and its own vibe — Stoke MakeFest has a very different feel to ours, because their maker scene is different to ours, and their city is different to ours.

The other way to expand it is that, rather than by just expanding to other cities, you can have more events on throughout the year. Rather than being solely a one-day event, you can have all these spin-offs, so once a month there’s something going on. Rather than it just being about tech and digital, we’ve always liked to have some sort of fantasy element. Things like Doctor Who, Star Wars, Darth Vader, K-9 — the kids love that. We have a lot of friends who are into steampunk; they get roped in to do front-of-house duties. You know what the funny thing was at the first one? Not only did the public enjoy it, but also the makers. It’s kind of like a musician playing an acoustic set. We’ve got a get-together on the Thursday before, we’ve got a Friday night party going, we always do an after-party. The public come on the Saturday, but there’s always stuff going on that week for makers.

In addition to always wanting it to be free for the public, and for the makers to not have to pay for their stand, we feel very strongly that we should give something back. We always give them lunch, we always give them a badge, and there’s always a party. We can’t pay them, but it’s our way of showing our appreciation to the makers who come and make it what it is. The celebration and sharing are big parts of the maker ethos.

People like to show [their projects] not to show off, not to say ‘Look at how clever I am’ — it’s more to say ‘Look at this awesome thing, isn’t this cool?’ Trying to explain that to people can be tricky. You can make this: here’s how you do it. That’s the ethos.

CK: I always feel with MakeFest — you said it’s like an acoustic gig. I always envisioned it as Liverpool’s party for makers. It’s our little get-together, and that’s how I like it.

Read the full interview in HackSpace magazine issue 19, out now! This month we’re looking at building a walking robot, laser cutting LED jewellery, the 55 timer chip, and much more. Download the issue for free, or buy it in print on our website.

Get HackSpace magazine issue 19 from all good newsagents

Special subscription offer

To have 132 pages of making delivered to your doorstep every month, subscribe to HackSpace magazine from just £5 for your first three issues.

The post Liverpool MakeFest | HackSpace magazine #19 appeared first on Raspberry Pi.

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