Just another of my once in a lifetime projects that will certainly become a waste of time and forum space.
Just to give the Google 'bot something to think about
:
KCR ::
Kindle
Code
Review
EC2 ::
Elastic
Compute
Cloud
AWS ::
Amazon
Web
Services
Ref:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8TlukLu11Yo
Read all of that reading before viewing the view.
NSA ::
National (USA)
Security
Agency
OSW ::
Over the
Shoulder
Watchers
And if you thought the Amazon
OSW of everything you read was bad, just imagine what the real pros (
NSA) of that activity does.
SRE ::
Software
Reverse
Engineering
Ghidra :: A software reverse engineering (
SRE) suite of tools developed by
NSA's
Research Directorate in support of their Cybersecurity mission.
Ref:
https://ghidra-sre.org/
Ghidra includes the ability to support review activity by multiple collaborators over a network server .
The Amazon
AWS system supports a free (no cost) tier of services.
Ref:
https://aws.amazon.com/free/?all-free-tier.sort-by=item.additionalFields.SortRank&all-free-tier.sort-order=asc&awsf.Free%20Tier%20Types=tier%23always-free&awsm.page-all-free-tier=2
Of course, that includes a (virtual) Linux server:
https://aws.amazon.com/getting-started/tutorials/launch-a-virtual-machine/?trk=gs_card&e=gs&p=gsrc
(Avoid the mention of
Lightsail, that is NOT one of the free tier of services.)
KNC1 :: Not the username that will be associated with the above.
KJBS ::
Kindle
Jail
Break
Services (service, system, slushfund, ...)
Now that might make for a good administrator's name of an Amazon
AWS free tier.
If Amazon/Lab126 really wants to get serious about preventing our jail break activities, we need to get equally serious about Kindle firmware review and audit.
And where better than using Amazon's (free) virtual system.
I always wanted to try doing jail break development on Amazon's own, free, services (I have posted on this subject in the past).
Maybe this will be the time I actually try it out.