12 comments

  • StayTrue 9 minutes ago
  • dang 4 hours ago
    Related. Others?

    Reverse engineering a mysterious UDP stream in my hotel (2016) - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=34912300 - Feb 2023 (179 comments)

    Reverse engineering a mysterious UDP stream in my hotel (2016) - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26633792 - March 2021 (86 comments)

    Reverse Engineering a Mysterious UDP Stream in My Hotel (2016) - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=16197436 - Jan 2018 (15 comments)

    Reverse Engineering a Mysterious UDP Stream in My Hotel - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=11744518 - May 2016 (181 comments)

    • yunnpp 3 hours ago
      It's just as good in 2026 - 2d. Imagine Santa delivering his goods and hearing a mysterious UDP stream and wondering, "Is my supply chain being disrupted?", only to then realize that it was just the owners' TV spying on him after it was left on standby instead being completely turned off.
  • VoidWhisperer 9 minutes ago
    Archive link as it seems the site is down: https://archive.is/afYvQ
  • Dilettante_ 2 hours ago
    This is the shortest, yet still fully complete example of an article that scratches that itch. Awakening the "intellectual curiosity", documenting the steps, and finding the actual end of the matter. The mundanity of the revelation is like the icing on the cake.
  • kstrauser 4 hours ago
    I LOLed at the ending. Nicely done!

    I appreciate people posting negative results, too. The journey is the interesting part, and I like the humanity of saying "welp, at least now I know".

    • mingus88 3 hours ago
      Yeah 99/100 times it’s gotta be mundane but wouldn’t it be interesting to spoof that traffic and play anything you wanted in the elevator?
      • kstrauser 3 hours ago
        "That would be wrong. You totally should not do that."

        But yes, absolutely!

  • gkbrk 4 hours ago
    Author here, hi :^)
    • bayesnet 39 minutes ago
      Thank you for writing one of my favorite blog posts of all time! I am curious: What is your favorite thing you’ve written?
    • nicelunch 3 hours ago
      Hi! Do you happen to have that elevator music saved? I'm curious what it sounded like.
    • contingencies 3 hours ago
      Since you appear to be Turkish what's your favourite Turkish food that is poorly known outside of the country? Also don't miss https://subseacables.blogspot.com/2025/12/fully-diverse-100g...
      • gkbrk 3 hours ago
        "poorly known outside the country" rules out the main foods I like.

        I love a good Kuymak [1] though, I think that's not too well known.

        [1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kuymak

        • contingencies 3 hours ago
          Nice, haven't tried that. Found a local cafe which looks very well run where it's a feature. On the list for next year! Happy New Year!
  • runtimepanic 1 hour ago
    This is the kind of curiosity that leads to the most interesting findings. Hotels are a perfect storm of shared networks, opaque vendor integrations, and “it just works” assumptions. A mysterious UDP stream could be anything from Chromecast-style discovery to IPTV control or some half-documented vendor heartbeat. What’s usually more revealing than the payload is the pattern: broadcast vs unicast, frequency, and who responds. Also a good reminder of how much ambient network noise we’re all swimming in without noticing.
  • naikrovek 21 minutes ago
    Site is down, I think. :(
  • mikesale 33 minutes ago
    omg this is so my vibe! I used to read corrupted database files for a living and it was soooo much fun.
  • 7e22v837278gb1p 54 minutes ago
    Good hotel room hacking entertainment is provided in-house, in this case.
  • jiscariot 19 minutes ago
    I've read this one before, but this time it really hit home in how unlike most of the modern AI-emoji-filled-cringy-heading-20-page blog slop, it is. Very refreshing.
  • schmuckonwheels 1 hour ago
    I was expecting to see a post bemoaning the lack of encryption on the elevator music...