Articles tagged easter egg

  1. Mr. Robot Season 2 Episode 4 Easter Egg


    After seeing the last Mr. Robot easter egg from season 2 episode 1 I have been on the lookout for IP's and domains to try and go after. At the end of season 2 episode 4 (init_1.asec) Elliot logs into an IRC server and the IP address is clearly visible as 192.251.68.53. ip

    I decided to scan that host with nmap and got the following results:

     sudo nmap -sS -Pn -sV -n 192.251.68.253
    Starting Nmap 7.12 ( https://nmap.org ) at 2016-07-28 08:46 EDT
    Nmap scan report for 192.251.68.253
    Host is up (0.023s latency).
    Not shown: 996 filtered ports
    PORT     STATE SERVICE     VERSION
    21/tcp   open  ftp?
    80/tcp   open  http-proxy  F5 BIG-IP load balancer http proxy
    554/tcp  open  rtsp?
    7070/tcp open  realserver?
    Service Info: Device: load balancer
    

    HTTP up, cool. I went to the site and it was a fake IRC server with the hostname irc.colo-solutions.net: irc

    After it logged me in as D0loresH4ze I was dropped in a channel called #th3g3ntl3man with the all too familiar samsepi0l (for the uninformed, Sam Sepiol was the alias Elliot used in season one to gain access to Steel Mountain, a secure datacenter).

    After poking around and trying to get samsepi0l to say something besides "i don't have time for this right now." I played the roll of Darlene and entered what she said in the show: input

    Here is the respone I got: response

    they have changed their standard issue. we have a way in.

    What does that even mean? At the end of the episode this line of dialogue was not shown. Only wait for my instructions was. The scene after shows a news article from Business Insider titled FBI gives up Blackberry for Android. I assume that is their "standard issue" and he is going to hack into them via their smartphones. That's a bold move, we'll see how it plays out next week.

    After this I investigated a couple of other addresses I found (192.251.68.240, 104.97.14.93, 192.251.68.249, irc.eversible.co) but none of them turned up anything. I looked at the page source too, hoping to find something hidden in the javascript or HTML. Nothing there either... I guess we will just have to wait and see where this goes! I'll probably take a closer look at this after work, but I thought this would be cool to share now.