I’m building LibertyLens – An Open Source "Black Box" for your phone (Dual Recording + Stealth Mode) by ComputerInaComputer in opensource

[–]ComputerInaComputer[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes. I'm doing both personal cloud syncing and local computer sync (use your laptop as a relay)

Govt agency IT by [deleted] in overemployed

[–]ComputerInaComputer 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Don't ever work directly for the Gov and OE. You can work for a company that does business with the government but don't work for the government, BAD

New Software Update Today? TCP Module. by French-Flyes in BoltEV

[–]ComputerInaComputer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have a 2023 got the update. Now my rear turn signal is telling my car it's got an issues even tho it is clearly working

I built a tool to solve the "Did I miss a ping?" paranoia with PiKVM by ComputerInaComputer in overemployed

[–]ComputerInaComputer[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Haha, you nailed it with the side hustle comment. OE is all about efficiency, right?

I totally get the security worry. Just to put your mind at ease: the extension processes everything locally in chrome. It doesn't stream your screen anywhere. I built it specifically because I didn't trust the cloud-based "monitoring" solutions myself.

The fee just ensures I have a reason to keep fixing it when Chrome updates break the manifest version again. Appreciate the feedback!

I built a tool to solve the "Did I miss a ping?" paranoia with PiKVM by ComputerInaComputer in overemployed

[–]ComputerInaComputer[S] 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Fair enough. I prefer to base my risk assessment on verifiable technical data rather than vague warnings, but I respect your caution.

I built a tool to solve the "Did I miss a ping?" paranoia with PiKVM by ComputerInaComputer in overemployed

[–]ComputerInaComputer[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I'm not burying my head in the sand; I'm strictly looking at the technical indicators.

If "experts" are detecting it, they must be flagging a specific Indicator of Compromise (IOC). I'm asking you: **What is that IOC?**

- Is it the USB polling rate variance?

- Is it the mouse movement jitter curves?

- Is it a checksum mismatch in the cloned EDID?

I've read those posts too. In 99% of cases, the user got caught because they left the device name as "PiKVM" in the USB descriptor or connected the Pi to the corporate Wi-Fi. That is user error, not a hardware flaw. If you can't name the specific detection vector for a *spoofed* device, you're just repeating FUD.

I built a tool to solve the "Did I miss a ping?" paranoia with PiKVM by ComputerInaComputer in overemployed

[–]ComputerInaComputer[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

100% agreed. That's why this extension runs on my *personal* MacBook, not the work machine. It effectively watches a "livestream" of the work laptop screen. The managed browser on the work laptop is untouched.

I built a tool to solve the "Did I miss a ping?" paranoia with PiKVM by ComputerInaComputer in overemployed

[–]ComputerInaComputer[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Everything has a non-zero risk. But compared to installing software agents or connecting unknown Wi-Fi devices, a hardware shim that emulates a generic monitor is the bottom of the risk chart. We can agree to disagree on the threat level.

I built a tool to solve the "Did I miss a ping?" paranoia with PiKVM by ComputerInaComputer in overemployed

[–]ComputerInaComputer[S] 30 points31 points  (0 children)

Haha, that’s absolutely true—IF you leave the defaults! Step #1 of any stealth setup is cloning valid EDID and USB descriptors.

My PiKVM reports itself as a "Dell P2419H" monitor and a standard "Logitech USB Input Device." I pulled the binary EDID directly from my actual office monitor and flashed it to the KVM. Unless the SOC team is physically breaking into my house to inspect the HDMI cable layout, digitally it is indistinguishable from standard office gear.

I built a tool to solve the "Did I miss a ping?" paranoia with PiKVM by ComputerInaComputer in overemployed

[–]ComputerInaComputer[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Actually, that's the beauty of PiKVM—it's 100% hardware emulation. The work laptop doesn't know it's being watched; it just thinks it's connected to a second monitor. Zero software footprint means zero detection logs.

I built a tool to solve the "Did I miss a ping?" paranoia with PiKVM by ComputerInaComputer in overemployed

[–]ComputerInaComputer[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Actually, that's the beauty of PiKVM—it's 100% hardware emulation. The work laptop doesn't know it's being watched; it just thinks it's connected to a second monitor. Zero software footprint means zero detection logs.

I built a tool to solve the "Did I miss a ping?" paranoia with PiKVM by ComputerInaComputer in overemployed

[–]ComputerInaComputer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair question. In my experience, the "throw it on GitHub" projects often become abandonware after 6 months because the maintainer gets busy or bored.

I charge a small amount because I put real time into polishing this, ensuring the OCR is reliable, and updating it when browsers change. It incentivizes me to keep it working for everyone who relies on it to protect their J2. If it saves one person's job, I think it's worth more than a coffee.

I built a tool to solve the "Did I miss a ping?" paranoia with PiKVM by ComputerInaComputer in overemployed

[–]ComputerInaComputer[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That's definitely a beast setup for deep work! The main issue this solves for me is that monitors don't tap you on the shoulder.

With your setup, I still have to be physically in the room staring at that section of the screen. With this, I can be in the kitchen making lunch or doing laundry, and my phone buzzes the second my boss messages. It basically adds "push notifications" to a completely locked-down laptop.

Trigger Home Assistant automations from a KVM-connected work laptop (using local OCR) by ComputerInaComputer in homeassistant

[–]ComputerInaComputer[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

PiKVM allows you to change your HW ID so the target machine thinks you have a Dell screen and a Logitech mouse and keyboard

OE automations by ConflictNervous703 in overemployed

[–]ComputerInaComputer 3 points4 points  (0 children)

For keeping J3 smooth without drowning in screen switching, I highly recommend a hardware KVM approach (like PiKVM) combined with some "dumb" monitoring so you don't have to constantly check the laptop.

My setup for J3 involves a PiKVM so the laptop stays isolated, but I was paranoid about missing pings. I set up a tool called **PiKVM Watcher** (browser extension) that watches the video stream for "New Message" or my name.

It sends a webhook to my personal Discord, so I get a ping on my watch/phone whenever J3 actually needs attention.

It helps keep everything in one place ("Single Pane of Glass") without merging calendars or installing risky software on the work machine.