CodeMonkeyZ, [03.08.21 00:36] [Forwarded from Maintenance] The BIOS is a sub-operating system. It runs behind the scenes. Before your computer turns on and boots Windows, it follows the settings and instructions present in the BIOS. CodeMonkeyZ, [03.08.21 00:44] What is CLOUD DESKTOP? CodeMonkeyZ, [03.08.21 00:57] [ Photo ] What is PXE boot? Hint, it requires a network card: https://heimdalsecurity.com/blog/what-is-pxe-boot/ https://t.me/CodeMonkeyZ/991
CodeMonkeyZ, [03.08.21 01:16] [Forwarded from Maintenance] Further intel on BIOS and related settings: The screenshots display internal settings at a level beneath what you see when you typically access a device. The BIOS is the ‘deep machine’ that lives just below the surface. From here, one can change low level settings like machine date & time, boot drive order, set system-level access passwords, or modify properties of the CPU. Someone with access to the BIOS can configure a machine to ‘boot’ or startup from the network instead of the local hard drive (where one might have Windows installed) by enabling PXE, pronounced PIXIE, from the BIOS. The BIOS isn’t a backdoor. It’s a side entrance that the owner/operator keeps the keys to. https://t.me/CodeMonkeyZ/992
CM just now: We have audio and video https://t.me/CodeMonkeyZ/981
For some simplification at the lowest level… Geeks such as I (Whom started playing with Linux on a Tandy Color Computer 3 back in the day) find harder to break down in a barney style…. this helps: America First Audit Channel, [03.08.21 00:17] [Forwarded from Maintenance] Further intel on BIOS and related settings: The screenshots display internal settings at a level beneath what you see when you typically access a device. The BIOS is the ‘deep machine’ that lives just below the surface. From here, one can change low level settings like machine date & time, boot drive order, set system-level access passwords, or modify properties of the CPU. Someone with access to the BIOS can configure a machine to ‘boot’ or startup from the network instead of the local hard drive (where one might have Windows installed) by enabling PXE, pronounced PIXIE, from the BIOS. The BIOS isn’t a backdoor. It’s a side entrance that the owner/operator keeps the keys to. America First Audit Channel, [03.08.21 00:55] [Forwarded from Nick Moseder] If the CodeMonkey drops are too technical for you, here is the simplified version! Essentially, there is a whistleblower who has videoed and audio-recorded themselves accessing the Operating System on the machines, showing they were connected to the internet and the results could potentially be manipulated and adjusted from a centralized location.
>>14256513 Big question now is if the servers/machines are set to a cloud boot. LAN PXE boot would be possible without internet, but not a cloud boot. PXE boot is a setup where a main server has the operating system files, and a networked attached machine doesn't. The network attached machine (thin client) gets the boot files from the main server over a network cable. In house, it is possible to have no internet access, but not if the servers, or the thin clients, are getting it's OS files from the cloud. If the precincts are running a cloud PXE, then a voting systems tech only needs to change OS settings on the cloud server. No access needed to individual precincts. Pretty fucking big development with the Cloud PXE question.
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