FreedomEclipse
~Technological Technocrat~
- Joined
- Apr 20, 2007
- Messages
- 24,134 (3.74/day)
- Location
- London,UK
System Name | DarnGosh Edition |
---|---|
Processor | AMD 7800X3D |
Motherboard | MSI X670E GAMING PLUS |
Cooling | Thermalright AM5 Contact Frame + Phantom Spirit 120SE |
Memory | 2x32GB G.Skill Trident Z5 NEO DDR5 6000 CL32-38-38-96 |
Video Card(s) | Asus Dual Radeon™ RX 6700 XT OC Edition |
Storage | WD SN770 1TB (Boot)| 2x 2TB WD SN770 (Gaming)| 2x 2TB Crucial BX500| 2x 3TB Toshiba DT01ACA300 |
Display(s) | LG GP850-B |
Case | Corsair 760T (White) {1xCorsair ML120 Pro|5xML140 Pro} |
Audio Device(s) | Yamaha RX-V573|Speakers: JBL Control One|Auna 300-CN|Wharfedale Diamond SW150 |
Power Supply | Seasonic Focus GX-850 80+ GOLD |
Mouse | Logitech G502 X |
Keyboard | Duckyshine Dead LED(s) III |
Software | Windows 11 Home |
Benchmark Scores | ლ(ಠ益ಠ)ლ |
If it requires the internet, then hell no. I will never be convinced to connect my stand-alone appliances to the internet.
There is this story floating around on the internet that some hacker group hacked a load of samsung smart fridges, installed some malware and basically turned all the hacked devices into a zombie bot net.
If you google 'samsung bot net fridge' you'll find all of that stuff. But their smart TVs have also had the same attention from hackers as well. Im not sure if samsung software/firmware is just very easy to break and exploit or if the hackers just really hate samsungs.
Theoretically, the same thing could happen to smart appliances from other manufacturers.