this post was submitted on 22 Mar 2024
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Write a web server with a countdown that sends you regularly a link via email to reset the countdown.
One of the less mentioned aspects is that a dead man switch should be difficult, if not impossible to detect and neutralise. If you are to the level of being unalived, you're likely also a target for significant directed hacking. Such a dead man switch should be as resistant as possible to this. A simple email could let them detect and disable your dead man switch.
Maybe make it look like a spam email? :-)
This is a good point -- it didn't have to look like spam tho, it could look like anything. Or it could look like many things. Write up a 10-20 line text file of bullshit emails from one person, or even a few people -- or even have Chat Gippity write them, tho that might have a paper trail, depending on your attacker.
All you have to do is put some "flag" word in the first few words so you recognize it. Then, any reply to that inbox (which could have many aliases) resets the timer.
The big problem is, imo, if you're "dangerous" enough to de-alive, then you've already exposed something big. Would you have something left to expose after that?
Hiding it would work. You just have to make sure you don't miss any.
As for the danger. There are levels of exposure. You could leak something damning, but that could be played off as a 1 off. You might also be sitting on a huge amount of paperwork that proves it's endemic. That paperwork might also expose others who wanted things changed, but don't want to be outed. In this case, an initial leak can test the waters. The additional info can be rolled out, if it's needed, or the results justified.
E.g. Initial leak proves they did something nasty. The additional info massively backs it up, but also implicates a VP in its gathering. You might not want to show that hand until later, either to protect them, or to gather more info on their reaction.