• Watch Out for Scammers!

    We've now added a color code for all accounts. Orange accounts are new members, Blue are full members, and Green are Supporters. If you get a message about a sale from an orange account, make sure you pay attention before sending any money!

Islamic Hackers? Arctic Light, Tucker, anyone?

Switchblade

muf kin poser
Full Member
Minuteman
-==[[ Hacked By Dr.ZoRk.IslaMiC ArmY ]]==-

OK, these fuckers mean WAR! They have thrown the gauntlet now. I mean, really, this is a cult website meant to keep kid drifters off the streets and on the tracks.
These regheaded fucktards have really shown their extra chromosome this time. Hacking Formula Drift, man, if I had IT skills, I would be going nuts on these assholes!

Arctic, Tucker et al, I know you guys would love to put your skills to the test with this stuff
 
I can't speak a lot about it due to my job...

I can say this, yes, there is a cyber war going on right now.

The hack you posted was a DNS poison attack, one of the more mild of the attacks going on right now.

There is plenty of work in Information Assurance though, dry as it is 95% of the time, 5% it actually gets exciting.
 
Maybe these hackers just see drifting for what it is - figure-skating with cars?

;)
 
A couple of months ago I was looking up gun parts and got a screen freeze showing Obama's face and said I had been caught by the FBI trying to buy illegal weapons parts. Really...??? Any way the page went on to read that the fine was $30,000 and or 10 years in the Federal Pen. BUT if I would send them a $300 money order within 48 hours they would turn my computer back on.

Crap heads...

My computer guy that does most of my PC stuff said I was the 6th person he had come in with something like that in 2 days.

Oh well...!
 
A couple of months ago I was looking up gun parts and got a screen freeze showing Obama's face and said I had been caught by the FBI trying to buy illegal weapons parts. Really...??? Any way the page went on to read that the fine was $30,000 and or 10 years in the Federal Pen. BUT if I would send them a $300 money order within 48 hours they would turn my computer back on.

Crap heads...

My computer guy that does most of my PC stuff said I was the 6th person he had come in with something like that in 2 days.

Oh well...!

LOL, I've made a few bucks off that one!

Simple solution, turn off the PC, unplug the network, boot up and log in. If you do not unplug the network it will come back as soon as you log in.

It's a legitimate JAVA app. Not legitimate in the sense of honor etc but it's not a trojan.

Once logged in, you'll need autoruns to find it's entry point, remove that and reboot.

Then send me $100 for giving the answer :D :D
 
Maybe these hackers just see drifting for what it is - figure-skating with cars?

;)

winning!!!

I have to wonder exactly just how much either of you know about the sport that one can make asinine commentary and the other agree. Think it's easy? Go try it sometime, then comment on it from experience.

I'll leave this here so you can see how the pros do it:



 
I have to wonder exactly just how much either of you know about the sport that one can make asinine commentary and the other agree. Think it's easy? Go try it sometime, then comment on it from experience.

I'll leave this here so you can see how the pros do it:







I have road raced and rallied so I appreciate the car control, but can't seem to get excited about drift.
 
I have to wonder exactly just how much either of you know about the sport that one can make asinine commentary and the other agree.

Well, for that matter, I don't know much about figure skating, either.
 
I have to wonder exactly just how much either of you know about the sport that one can make asinine commentary and the other agree. Think it's easy? Go try it sometime, then comment on it from experience.

I'll leave this here so you can see how the pros do it:





C'mon man, sense of humor eh?

I don't know where I read it but perhaps this will help, "one can realize an enormous amount of freedom if they don't take things personally."

Nice vids.
 
I can say I know a lot about figure skating! Those girls have great legs and wear tiny skirts! I think I know about the same amount about women's tennis except they moan really load!
 
C'mon man, sense of humor eh?

I don't know where I read it but perhaps this will help, "one can realize an enormous amount of freedom if they don't take things personally."

Nice vids.

I'll give you that since you placed the above into understandable context. ;)

I grew up with big bad V8's at Sear's Point then discovered the small bore inline dual cam fours from europe and japan. I always enjoyed road racing more than drag racing. As a kid, we had two places where we could drive fast. One was a hill up behind the house, public road, no traffic, so we would walkie talkie safety check our own little track attack Point A to B runs. A natural part of some of those corners was power sliding. If on a run, someone yelled cop, we had a fire road, gravel pack, that we would all run for if we were on teh bad end of the section toward the cops. They wouldn't run those fire roads, but we did. Those roads required a ton of drift, but we didn't know we were drifting, we were just doing power slide four wheel drifts through corners to scrub speed.
The first time I saw a real drift race, I was hooked. I mean damn, asian chicks in small skirts, nasty sounding cars with either small fours or V8's, like someone invented an event with all the best things, outside of the bourbon and cigar.
 
Drifting? Invented by tire companies, to wear out yer tires in 1/4 the time. Just as silly as the racecars with something like a bookshelf on the roof.
 
Drifting? Invented by tire companies, to wear out yer tires in 1/4 the time. Just as silly as the racecars with something like a bookshelf on the roof.

xs, I will see if this educates you beyond your initial ignorance. If not, you do know what it means to not be able to be educated out of ignorance, right?

[h=2]Japanese History of Drifting[/h]

<ins style="display:inline-table;border:none;height:250px;margin:0;padding:0;position:relative;visibility:visible;width:250px;background-color:transparent"><ins id="aswift_0_anchor" style="display:block;border:none;height:250px;margin:0;padding:0;position:relative;visibility:visible;width:250px;background-color:transparent"></ins></ins>
The history of drifting as we know it today goes way back to the 1960’s to the winding mountain roads of Japan. Back then a group of racers called the Rolling Zoku raced on the twisty mountain roads of Japan trying to set record times between point A and B.


As the racers improved and their lap times became faster, these racers started going over the grip limit of their tires. They found out that by going over the limit the car was still controllable. In the end it didn't seem to be faster, but it sure was a outrageous and exciting way to show off car control skills. It was then that racers in Japan first studied this driving technique.


Later on in the 1970’s there was the All Japan Touring Car Championship. The racers were heavily competing against each other, and each lap the racers increased their lap times bit by bit, testing the tires’ grip to the limit! This resulted in an awesome spectacle of car control where the racing drivers drifted their cars incredibly fast through the corners.


hakosuka.jpg
One of those drivers was a former motorcycle driver, Kunimitsu Takahashi.

Takahashi's drifting technique was unmatched by anyone else. He was able to hit the corner’s apex at high speeds perfectly and caused the car to oversteer.

With with great control he mastered the drifts and reached great exit speeds...



<ins style="display:inline-table;border:none;height:60px;margin:0;padding:0;position:relative;visibility:visible;width:468px;background-color:transparent"><ins id="aswift_1_anchor" style="display:block;border:none;height:60px;margin:0;padding:0;position:relative;visibility:visible;width:468px;background-color:transparent"></ins></ins>​

Combined with the fact that he was driving a car that was build for the win, the Nissan Skyline KPGC10, or “Hakosuka”, he accounted for more than 50+ straight victories on a row and captured several championship titles along the way. The spectacle of burning rubber made the crowd love Takahashi, under whom was a boy named Keiichi Tsuchiya.


The All Japan Touring Car Championship later evolved into the racing organization called JGTC (Japan Grand Touring Championship), or Super GT, where today Takahashi is the chairman of.


<ins style="display:inline-table;border:none;height:15px;margin:0;padding:0;position:relative;visibility:visible;width:468px;background-color:transparent"><ins id="aswift_2_anchor" style="display:block;border:none;height:15px;margin:0;padding:0;position:relative;visibility:visible;width:468px;background-color:transparent"></ins></ins>​

Keiichi Tsuchiya was an ordinary street racer and was a big fan of Takahashi’s drifting technique. Inspired by Takahashi’s driving skills Tsuchiya joined the Fuji Freshman Race in 1977. This is how his professional career started, but he was still a street racer. For day and night he practiced the drift techniques on the Japanese tight and twisty mountain roads (also known in Japanese as “touge”) with his 1986 Toyota Sprinter Trueno GTV.

- Japanese History Of Drifting -




While drifting was fast becoming a popular sport in Japan to the extent that several different grass roots drifting events were being held around he country, the sport found its way to Western shores, particularly in California where one of the first drifting events outside of Japan took place in 1996.
The site was the Willow Springs Raceway in Willow Springs, California where Dajido Inada, one of the founding fathers of the D1 Grand Prix, hosted the competition. At the event, future drifting stars Rhys Millen and Bryan Norris were two of the entrants. Since then, drifting has exploded in the West to become one of the most popular forms of automotive competition.
Essentially, what Inada and Tsuchiya started with the D1 Grand Prix has blossomed into many other world-class drifting events all over the world, including Formula D in the US, the NZ Drift Series in New Zealand, the Nordic Drifting Series in Europe, and most recently, the Red Bull Drifting Championship.
[h=3]Big Today, Bigger Tomorrow[/h] While drifting doesn’t have the grandeur of Formula One or the spectacle of NASCAR , it’s popularity has spurned a generation of upstart drifters practicing their latest hooning skills in every corner of the world. It’s hard to believe that the first organized drifting competition only happened a decade ago, and the sport’s appeal not just to the viewers, but to young racers, is living proof that drifting is a sport that’s yet to hit its full potential.

For all intents and purposes, it’s a sport that’s going to increase in popularity as the years go by, something that its forefathers from Japan should be mighty proud of.

- The History Of Drifting - Top Speed -




Ignorance can be educated out of existence; when one is ineducable, stupidity is all that remains.