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game_the0ryyesterday at 6:50 PM6 repliesview on HN

> At 4:59 pm, he asked an AI tool, “How do i clear system logs from SQL servers after deleting databases?” He later asked, “How do you clear all event and application logs from Microsoft windows server 2012?”

So many red flags, I can't even.


Replies

t0mas88yesterday at 9:39 PM

> In the space of a single hour, Muneeb deleted around 96 databases with US government information. He downloaded 1,805 files belonging to the EEOC and stashed them on a USB drive, then grabbed federal tax information for at least 450 people.

Maybe whoever runs infosec at that place should also be fired?

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darkwateryesterday at 8:13 PM

Yep, Windows Server 2012 being a big one :o

plagiaristyesterday at 8:24 PM

They forgot a

> "How do I clear chat logs from LLM?"

I guess?

jiggawattsyesterday at 8:19 PM

I love how this leaks out the fact that the DHS is running production databases on operating systems that are months away from end of extended support.

Windows Server has 5 years of mainstream support, 5 years of extended support, and then an extra 3 years paid Extended Security Updates (ESU) support. For 2012 and 2012 R2 that ends in October 2026.

The three years of ESU exists only for organisations like government departments that would rather pay Microsoft millions of dollars for patches than pay a competitive wage and hire competent IT staff that can complete upgrade projects on time.

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lostloginyesterday at 7:05 PM

Ready access to AI tools sure makes vandalism easy.

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insane_dreameryesterday at 10:35 PM

> So many red flags

starting with Windows Server _2012_ :O