I still love them
seen from United States
seen from Norway
seen from United States
seen from Yemen

seen from Argentina
seen from Netherlands

seen from Ukraine
seen from Spain

seen from Italy

seen from Türkiye

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United Arab Emirates
seen from Spain

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Italy
seen from United States

seen from Australia
seen from Brazil
seen from Germany

seen from Netherlands
I still love them
F/os icons headcanons because I'm bored and I wanted to do some icons
Mushroom- Hades along with Zeus, and Disney's Poseidon!?
Well Zeus and poseidon aren't from Disney, they are from destripando la historia, Spanish songs about everything that have a story.
mushroom - give a headcanon of your f/o
-Hades can have anger issues but he will do everything for protecting me because I'm his little princess.
-Zeus is married? Yes but he doesn't care, an Angel girlfriend is better than his wife hera.
-Poseidon loves when I play with his hair, is his favourite thing when I'm with him.
SeaDuke
SeaDuke appeared in October 2014, after the disclosure of most of the Duke campaigns. Like the majority of the Duke family, SeaDuke exclusively targets government organizations. The main difference between Seaduke and its sister campaigns is that SeaDuke focuses on a small number of high-value targets. Additionally, of the Duke malware, SeaDuke alone is programmed in python. This developers’ choice could indicate that the group is expanding their victim pool to Linux systems as well as Windows hosts. The overall framework of the malware remains similar to CozyDuke. SeaDuke is a highly configurable trojan and backdoor that is often installed onto victim systems through CozyDuke or via a compromised website. It has hundreds of possible configurations According to Symantec, the threat actor behind CozyDuke may only deploy SeaDuke in systems belonging to “major government-level targets.” SeaDuke primarily allows the attacker to upload, to download, and to delete files on the victim machine as well as to retrieve bot/ system information and to update the bot configuration. It is possible that the threat actor deploys the malware to remove the indicators of compromise from other campaigns after a successful breach. The trojan may also be used to conduct pass the ticket attacks on Kerberos systems, to steal emails from Microsoft Exchange servers using compromised credentials, to archive sensitive data, or to exfiltrate data through legitimate cloud services. The C&C infrastructure behind SeaDuke relies on over 200 compromised web servers and several layers of RC4 and AES encryption and Base 64 encoding techniques. These extra obfuscation measures may be an attempt to remain undiscovered and thereby remove the attention on the Duke campaigns. SeaDuke communicates with its C&C servers via HTTP(s).
SeaDaddy
SeaDuke
SeaDuke appeared in October 2014, after the disclosure of most of the Duke campaigns. Like the majority of the Duke family, SeaDuke exclusively targets government organizations. The main difference between Seaduke and its sister campaigns is that SeaDuke focuses on a small number of high-value targets. Additionally, of the Duke malware, SeaDuke alone is programmed in python. This developers’ choice could indicate that the group is expanding their victim pool to Linux systems as well as Windows hosts. The overall framework of the malware remains similar to CozyDuke. SeaDuke is a highly configurable trojan and backdoor that is often installed onto victim systems through CozyDuke or via a compromised website. It has hundreds of possible configurations According to Symantec, the threat actor behind CozyDuke may only deploy SeaDuke in systems belonging to “major government-level targets.” SeaDuke primarily allows the attacker to upload, to download, and to delete files on the victim machine as well as to retrieve bot/ system information and to update the bot configuration. It is possible that the threat actor deploys the malware to remove the indicators of compromise from other campaigns after a successful breach. The trojan may also be used to conduct pass the ticket attacks on Kerberos systems, to steal emails from Microsoft Exchange servers using compromised credentials, to archive sensitive data, or to exfiltrate data through legitimate cloud services. The C&C infrastructure behind SeaDuke relies on over 200 compromised web servers and several layers of RC4 and AES encryption and Base 64 encoding techniques. These extra obfuscation measures may be an attempt to remain undiscovered and thereby remove the attention on the Duke campaigns. SeaDuke communicates with its C&C servers via HTTP(s).
SeaDuke
SeaDuke appeared in October 2014, after the disclosure of most of the Duke campaigns. Like the majority of the Duke family, SeaDuke exclusively targets government organizations. The main difference between Seaduke and its sister campaigns is that SeaDuke focuses on a small number of high-value targets. Additionally, of the Duke malware, SeaDuke alone is programmed in python. This developers’ choice could indicate that the group is expanding their victim pool to Linux systems as well as Windows hosts. The overall framework of the malware remains similar to CozyDuke. SeaDuke is a highly configurable trojan and backdoor that is often installed onto victim systems through CozyDuke or via a compromised website. It has hundreds of possible configurations According to Symantec, the threat actor behind CozyDuke may only deploy SeaDuke in systems belonging to “major government-level targets.” SeaDuke primarily allows the attacker to upload, to download, and to delete files on the victim machine as well as to retrieve bot/ system information and to update the bot configuration. It is possible that the threat actor deploys the malware to remove the indicators of compromise from other campaigns after a successful breach. The trojan may also be used to conduct pass the ticket attacks on Kerberos systems, to steal emails from Microsoft Exchange servers using compromised credentials, to archive sensitive data, or to exfiltrate data through legitimate cloud services. The C&C infrastructure behind SeaDuke relies on over 200 compromised web servers and several layers of RC4 and AES encryption and Base 64 encoding techniques. These extra obfuscation measures may be an attempt to remain undiscovered and thereby remove the attention on the Duke campaigns. SeaDuke communicates with its C&C servers via HTTP(s).
SeaDaddy
Those blurring snapchat filters savin' lives out here. #SeaDaddy 🛳