• makeshiftreaper@lemmy.world
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    23 hours ago

    On top of them just being really fucking annoying, especially in a cube farm, they’re also small battery powered devices with a speaker. AKA: a perfect listening tool hider. If you have classified projects of course security is going to ban them

    • titter@lemmy.world
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      23 hours ago

      They also “learned” and had the ability to repeat back some of what it hears, not so good for protecting secrets

      • makeshiftreaper@lemmy.world
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        22 hours ago

        Common misconception, they didn’t repeat anything. They just gradually spoke more of whatever language they were in. The only thing that was kind of like learning is they could react to is other nearby furbies

        Just to common sense check this: around this time the video games Seaman and Hey You! Pikachu came out with dedicated microphone accessories, had a video game console to power them, and they barely functioned. You think a $35 plastic toy will pull it off?

        • higgsboson@piefed.social
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          22 hours ago

          At the time Furbies were popular, there were other stuffed animals that did the recording and talk-back thing. Dont seem reliable enough for spy work, though.

    • AllNewTypeFace@leminal.space
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      22 hours ago

      The original ones had just a potato-tier 8-bit CPU (a 6502, IIRC) and no wireless capacities, but it would not have been beyond the KGB (or indeed the CIA) to make one with a chip that looks identical to the 6502 but contains a second, more powerful, processor and a radio transceiver. And they probably had practical examples of this.

      • atomicbocks@sh.itjust.works
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        17 hours ago

        Doing something like that would probably actually have been outside the capability of Russia at that time. There is a reason the Commodore 64 was still popular in Eastern Europe in the 90s. Basically in the late 70s Russia, who’s technology was largely electro-mechanical, stopped trying to innovate and started covertly importing. By the time the Soviet Union collapsed they were completely reliant on western technology.

        There is a museum of Soviet era “video” games that I have always wanted to go to because their tech was so different than ours, we never had any games like them.

      • teft@piefed.social
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        20 hours ago

        KGB was disbanded in 1991. The FSB was the eventual successor. But also during the late 90s russia was being stomped economically. It’s unlikely they would have been able to come with a device like that.