#> cat changelog.txt Welcome to the changelog! Here you’ll be able to view the past Releases EXE Apparel has produced. The top designs from each release will be kept as recurring designs.
Founders Line
Discontinued
Cyberattack Line
Current Release
The Heartbleed vulnerability hinged on a failure to validate payload lengths in SSL’s heartbeat feature. When a client initiated a heartbeat, they could lie about the message length. When the server would respond, it would send back the requested data plus extra bytes of raw memory. This memory leak revealed everything from user Pll to the server’s private encryption keys.
WannaCry wasn’t just standard malware; it was a weapon. By weaponizing the leaked EternalBlue exploit targeting the Windows SMB protocol, it gained the ability to self-propagate through networks without any user interaction. It locked down hundreds of thousands of systems, demanding ransom to release the private keys.
In 2009, a social media app company called RockYou suffered a breach that would change password security forever. Because they stored their user data in plaintext, hackers walked away with over 32 million passwords. Today, the "rockyou.txt" file is the gold standard for security researchers and penetration testers worldwide, used to benchmark the strength of encryption.
Stuxnet changed everything. It was a worm that didn’t just steal data, but targeted and destroyed critical componentry. By infiltrating an “air gapped” network via infected USB drives, it forced centrifuges to spin until they physically tore themselves apart. It was the first time in history that digital code had caused catastrophic physical destruction.
Meltdown turned a CPU’s greatest strength into its biggest weakness. By weaponizing “out-of-order execution”, attackers could trick the hardware into leaking data it should have never revealed. However, this wasn’t a bug, it was a feature designed to make processors faster by predicting future instructions. From passwords to private encryption keys, nothing was off-limits because the flaw was built into the silicon itself.

