How did you go about finding this discovery? What part of the device do you think is responsible and do you think it's possible to remove it? or would that be better achieved with software?
Have you had any luck hacking into the LIEs network as the communications network's security is pretty much non-existent but the LIEs network is the exact opposite?
It took a few days and an algorithm that I fed into their system through a match up between my personal tablet from home and the device they'd given me. I used that and another device to--
[It's technical and she doesn't mind giving an overview, but there's a reason she graduated from high school at fourteen and MIT at nineteen; she's extremely smart. Once she gets through sending the basics over several texts, she adds:]
It didn't look removable and I'm sure they've locked down the loophole I exploited.
Would you be interested in collaborating in the future to test out what else we can find out about the devices and how they're monitoring us? Because I had a thought--
[Tim will then prove that he was able to understand the technical jargon but also provide a couple of different perspectives. They might not work but it shows his understanding. Tim might not have Felicity's school credentials as he's a high school drop but you wouldn't be able to tell from the way he talks right now]
I would also like to see if given the right amount of brain and computer power if we could hack the LIES network in general.
As much as Felicity can appreciate those kind of smarts in someone else — God, she misses Curtis — her week behind bars, as 'slap on the wrist' silly as it was, proved to her that she's not willing to get anyone she doesn't already know and trust into this mess. Not yet and certainly not over the very devices she's been hacking. Considering that her first attempt took a couple of days, she has no idea how long her next attempt might take, but she's not going to risk stronger consequences on someone else.]
If you meant the network we use to communicate, it doesn't require a hard line hack to get in. That part is easy.
The devices do what they do and while I know where their servers are based, I have no doubt it's guarded really well. Just not sure I'm ready to go at it right away.
No, I'm well aware of how easy the communication network is to get into. I meant the network that our captors have on serious lockdown.
Would you be willing to share the location of their servers? I'm not saying we have to do anything right away. I just think we'd have a lot more luck working with everyone together.
I just feel there's a lot of very talented and skilled people being bought into this world and none of us are working together. That only benefits L.I.E.S
[He's not wrong on the working together, and she's already had to hear about it from Ray. The only reason Ray hadn't ended up in jail with her (well, he had, but voluntarily), is because he hadn't known.
Letting people make their own choices isn't something she's up for yet, and she's aware this makes her a hypocrite.]
I'm not okay discussing this on the network.
[They're monitoring sexual activity, yes, but she's more comfortable talking in person.]
Re: un: overwatch
How did you go about finding this discovery? What part of the device do you think is responsible and do you think it's possible to remove it? or would that be better achieved with software?
Have you had any luck hacking into the LIEs network as the communications network's security is pretty much non-existent but the LIEs network is the exact opposite?
no subject
[It's technical and she doesn't mind giving an overview, but there's a reason she graduated from high school at fourteen and MIT at nineteen; she's extremely smart. Once she gets through sending the basics over several texts, she adds:]
It didn't look removable and I'm sure they've locked down the loophole I exploited.
[Doesn't mean she isn't going to try again.]
no subject
[Tim will then prove that he was able to understand the technical jargon but also provide a couple of different perspectives. They might not work but it shows his understanding. Tim might not have Felicity's school credentials as he's a high school drop but you wouldn't be able to tell from the way he talks right now]
I would also like to see if given the right amount of brain and computer power if we could hack the LIES network in general.
no subject
As much as Felicity can appreciate those kind of smarts in someone else — God, she misses Curtis — her week behind bars, as 'slap on the wrist' silly as it was, proved to her that she's not willing to get anyone she doesn't already know and trust into this mess. Not yet and certainly not over the very devices she's been hacking. Considering that her first attempt took a couple of days, she has no idea how long her next attempt might take, but she's not going to risk stronger consequences on someone else.]
If you meant the network we use to communicate, it doesn't require a hard line hack to get in. That part is easy.
The devices do what they do and while I know where their servers are based, I have no doubt it's guarded really well. Just not sure I'm ready to go at it right away.
no subject
Would you be willing to share the location of their servers? I'm not saying we have to do anything right away. I just think we'd have a lot more luck working with everyone together.
I just feel there's a lot of very talented and skilled people being bought into this world and none of us are working together. That only benefits L.I.E.S
no subject
Letting people make their own choices isn't something she's up for yet, and she's aware this makes her a hypocrite.]
I'm not okay discussing this on the network.
[They're monitoring sexual activity, yes, but she's more comfortable talking in person.]
Let's talk face to face.
no subject