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speerer
Decoding the obfuscated bash script on a Uniqlo t-shirt tris.sherliker.net

estebarb3 hours ago

"Uniqlo x Akamai sells another design of shirt in the same range which is plainly incomplete"

Imagine having to return a t-shirt because that malfunction!

— I don't understand why are you returning this, was the size wrong or you didn't like it?

— No, there is a syntax error at line 37 that makes it impossible to run, and I'm concerned people on the street may think I promote unsafe bash scripting.

_joelan hour ago

Worked on my torso

noisy_boy15 minutes ago

- I am shell-shocked at the lack of quality assurance! Can you at least apply a patch?

entropie3 minutes ago

Patch could be applied via pants.

cromka3 hours ago

Oh the Karens these days!

Octoth0rpe2 hours ago

Surely such a person would use the spelling k@r3n

raphlinus2 hours ago

The font is Roboto Mono, not Consolas.

There's something else a lot stranger going on, though. It is a proper monospace font, but the typesetting on the shirt is not. There's some kerning going on (I noticed it especially in the 'Iy' pair), and also it appears that narrower characters such as 'i' take less horizontal space. If I had to guess, I would say that it was set with a tool such as "optical kerning" in InDesign.

somatan hour ago

Has anyone ever made a monospace font with dynamic kerning? Which is a silly thing I never thought of until I read the above comment. This sounds nonsensical at first glance(and it may be) but hear me out.

We use monospace fonts for a reason, they stack in a grid nicely. But within the confines of that grid there is room to shift a character left or right a bit which may lead to a nicer to read monospace. (it is equally likely to lead to a hideous mess, every time a letter would shift left it would leave a larger space right)

roblabla33 minutes ago

Monaspace has a feature called "texture healing" that does something similar: it allows bigger letters to "steal" space from adjascent smaller letters, to make it easier to read. The result is that the letters are still in a grid, while still allowing for bigger letters to "breathe".

https://github.com/githubnext/monaspace/blob/main/docs/Textu...

It's the main reason I use monaspace as a font.

speererop29 minutes ago

Thank you, I think you're right! I've added a correction in the post and cited your comment.

olooney2 hours ago

If you enjoy this kind of thing, you might also like Martin Kleppe's work, such as the Quine Clock:

https://aem1k.com/qlock/

I reverse engineered it to a unobfuscated version a few years ago:

https://gist.github.com/olooney/a89db3932b089925b71b68d7e9f2...

He's done a ton of other great ASCII visualizations as well:

https://aem1k.com/

wbh14 hours ago

I love this shirt! Here's a nice video from the actual designer about the process of making this shirt (including intentionally making it hard to OCR): https://youtu.be/jocGLiecpjU?t=526

criddell2 hours ago

It would probably be quicker to type it in than figure out how to OCR it. It would be like typing in a game from a COMPUTE! magazine 45 years go.

https://archive.org/details/1983-01-compute-magazine/page/96...

speererop4 hours ago

Author here. Thank you so much for the link which I hadn't seen! I'm very happy to see this and I'm gratified that it was deliberately difficult to OCR, not just me.

Tiberium6 hours ago

OCRing this is a nightmare and is a good benchmark to any self-proclaimed good OCR/vision model.

I think though it could likely be easily OCR'd if you give the image to any decent agentic harness with a good vision model, e.g. newest Claude/GPT ones, and tell them to split the image per lines, and then just OCR each line individually.

I wonder if the script itself was written by an LLM before obfuscation? There seem to be a lot of comments in it, but in this case it's still ok :)

lemagedurage5 hours ago

I don't think it was written by an LLM, some things stand out:

The congratulations text is both in English and Japanese. Contains a single heart emoji.

There was an intention to have a cyan to orange gradient, but the range starts in an ANSI block, ends halfway through the 256 color block and 256 terminal colors are not arranged like a gradient at all.

There's no sleep at the end of the loop where I feel like an LLM would add that defensively.

n2j35 hours ago

Human here. I added a sleep 0.5 at the end, it's too fast to read otherwise. Makes for a nice terminal screensaver!

INTPenis4 hours ago

Hi fellow human, I got the same idea. Just a sleep 0.1 before the echo "" makes it readable. Otherwise it scrolls way too fast.

make34 hours ago

"the code is not quite detail oriented enough to be AI", times are changing

pkilgorean hour ago

Flawless, completely unnecessary abstraction is a better tell of LLM code than "comment clearly responding to a part of a prompt that I cannot see".

DaSHacka4 hours ago

More like 'not boilerplate-y enough'

lemagedurage4 hours ago

Ehh, AI makes plenty mistakes but they have a different vibe to it.

In my mind an AI would do something the most popular way even when that's not appropriate.

A human might do things in an unpopular way even when that's not appropriate.

grumbelbart22 hours ago

> OCRing this is a nightmare and is a good benchmark to any self-proclaimed good OCR/vision model.

It's not that difficult, our industrial OCR model read it correctly on its first attempt with default parameters. The characters are easily separable, there is no structured background (think expiration dates on yogurt aluminum lids) that confuses the reader, there is no almost-text-like texture anywhere that would clutter the result. The font is also nice and standard.

netsharc4 hours ago

The last time Internet people were obsessed with OCRing some base64 was a few months ago when the DoJ released tons of emails from some guy who died, but they were released as rasterized PDFs.

Can't remember his name now, there's been so many distractions...

OtherShrezzing4 hours ago

Safari's copy-text-from-image feature manages the entire base64 part of the string, except for the first character (I instead of a T). Weirdly, it gets much worse performance if you try to copy the entire string, including the hashbang part.

I wonder what it's doing under the hood to get such good performance?

khurs4 hours ago

Didn't know Safari had this.

Looked it up, you put mouse over text, then just select and copy it - very cool!

https://support.apple.com/en-gb/guide/safari/ibrw20183ad7/ma...

al_borland2 hours ago

It’s actually a system feature, not strictly a Safari feature. It also works in Photos, Preview, etc.

On meetings I will often take a screenshot of the URL someone is presenting. I’m then able to just open the image and click the URL in the image.

iamflimflam14 hours ago

There’s a whole bunch of hidden features that no one seems to be aware of.

Preview has pretty good background removal.

Notes will transcribe audio from audio files.

al_borland2 hours ago

Notes will do OCR as well. Trigger the feature, point the camera at something, and it will input just the text.

lostloginan hour ago

Notes is amazing. Autocompleting equations, converting jpg to pdf and various other admin chores.

The seamless cloud sync between devices is much appreciated too.

[deleted]3 hours agocollapsed

agys4 hours ago

Preview has it too… And it works extremely well.

underyx3 hours ago

I gave the photo to Opus 4.8 and it reconstructed the same script in one shot. Although it did say it had to correct some parts of it based on context where it suspected OCR mistakes.

shakna4 hours ago

> I wonder if the script itself was written by an LLM before obfuscation?

From the prototype shown here [0], and the way they talk about their process, I sincerely doubt it. Especially as they mention trying to make it hard for AI to handle the output.

[0] https://youtu.be/jocGLiecpjU?t=567

cb3213 hours ago

I watched that whole video link - thank you for that - and he doesn't really say. In fact, he spends much more time on the beige color harkening to computer case plastics of the 80s & 90s.

The AI not handling the output relates to the final base64 output on the T-shirt (which other comments in this thread mention manually keying in or TFA discusses in the context of OCR). So, that is just not relevant to the question.

What made me start to wonder, personally, was that the output seems identical if you use "♥PEACE♥FOR♥ALL" instead of the version with internal repeats. IF there is any point to that "manual expansion of the cycles", IMO that deserves a comment much more so than "# Calculate length of text; text_length=".

Also, that `echo -n ...` followed by `echo ""` instead of just plain `echo` in the first place seems like the kind of copy-pasta code LLMs generate. Then again, regular devs also write pretty bad copy-pasta code.

There is also this the weirdly "broken down" calculation with 3 `bc` invocations not 1 as if it was translated from a language with more arithmetic/special function power than bash.

There is also the color scale stuff done in the loop instead of outside (except the one color=$(..)) which seems very unnatural and also very like machine translation.

Also, at least for me, on my bash-5.3.15(1), `char="${text:t % text_length:1}"` does not work to slice out the multi-byte UTF8 heart symbols, but it sure does look like the kind of thing an LLM would do translating from a python3 script (such as something like https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48830669) into bash.

Another thing is, as others here have observed, there is nothing "gradual" about the xterm-256 color cube. So, "gradient" is a misnomer and exactly the kind of weird things LLMs do when they cobble text together.

Finally, all the tput stuff the script does instead of just "print x spaces" really smells like a human description of the side scroll in the video game graphic he shows inspired him somehow LLM-corrupted/complexified into the vertical scroll terminals do.

None of this is conclusive, but the video mentions 2023..2025 as when he did it and given that he was a designer and his concerns more visual than code-oriented, I'd have to say I disagree with your sincere doubt and I do strongly suspect the decoded script was very likely LLM-circa2024-generated, possibly with light post-edits by hand.

shakna2 hours ago

You mention someone else's Python version. Did you note that the prototype in the video was... Python?

All the smells you pointed out, just look like a Python dev approaching bash without fully understanding it.

bigfishrunning2 hours ago

> All the smells you pointed out, just look like a Python dev approaching bash without fully understanding it.

also, referring to Linux as "the language of the internet" when bash isn't particularly suited for internet tasks also smell like "excited windows Python dev"...

cb321an hour ago

FWIW, his screens looked a lot like OSX to me (which tracks with graphic design users in my experience).

Anyway, he seems like a very nice fellow and I wish him and almost all T-shirt designers well. That bash script just gave me a lot of pause. (And even that seems possibly downstream of him being nice and doing it himself to spare his team from what he called a "FrankenProject".)

cb321an hour ago

Yeah. The Flask web-page prototype was indeed in Python. (The prequel shirt was Go.)

{ Also, it was my own Py version which I mostly did in case anyone wanted to actually run the thing after such interest was expressed on this thread. :-) }

I already said regular devs and LLMs can both gen copy-pasta. That said, being "mostly" a Python dev, asking some LLM to translate to bash for him seems even more likely to me. Only he or those close to him know for sure. You & I cannot settle it here conclusively (as also said).

I also noted from the video that the ♥s (hearts) worked on whatever version of bash he tested with though it failed for me (which is why I wrote that Python). And his terminal title bar is switching between `tput` and `bc` and such meaning that what he was demoing was not some Python script. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

EDIT: Ah..another resolution of the hearts is to not run in an LC_ALL=C environment. Oops! `LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8 bash ..` fixed it. Oh well, I think the Python script is nicer in almost every way. E.g., you could |head -n60 and send it to a line printer/dot matrix reminiscent of the 1980s computers he shows in the video, although your printer driver would have to strip the color escapes. ;-)

justusthane2 hours ago

What is it about this that makes it particularly hard to OCR?

da_grift_shift3 hours ago

>I wonder if the script itself was written by an LLM before obfuscation?

I seem to recall seeing an Akamai-branded base64'd shell script on a white shirt pre-2021(?), so unless they've changed the code since then, I doubt it...

IshKebab5 hours ago

Definitely LLM. No humans write that many comments.

ChrisMarshallNY5 hours ago

Ahem...

My code usually clocs at 50/50 (or thereabouts)[0]. Has, since my very first real engineering project (in 1987)[1]. I discuss in detail, here[2].

But one reason that I like LLMs, is that they help me to write even more documentation. I have found that I can instruct an LLM to revise my documentation, and make it even more effective.

[0] https://github.com/ChrisMarshallNY (My GH profile. Pretty much everything there, is like that -has, since long before LLMs were a broken rubber on the drug store shelf).

[1] https://littlegreenviper.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/TF30... (Downloads a PDF)

[2] https://littlegreenviper.com/leaving-a-legacy/

IshKebab10 minutes ago

Your code isn't as unnecessarily commented as this. E.g. look at this line

https://github.com/RiftValleySoftware/RVS_Spinner/blob/d44ee...

An LLM would have commented `// Create temporary UI view.`

Completely redundant comments like this are a classic hallmark of LLMs:

  # Set frequency scaling factor
  freq=0.2
Dunno why I have been downvoted for stating the obvious.

Also from my brief look at one file it looks like you have 50% comments because you have a gazillion comment separator lines.

petu5 hours ago

Human could write that many comments to get enough base64 text for a design. Maybe to even get some of the highlighted characters in places they want (roughly equally spaced apart).

ivolimmen2 hours ago

Since LLM's are mimicking our code my guess we do...

NamlchakKhandroan hour ago

I do

latexr5 hours ago

> No humans write that many comments.

Especially in a case like this, I would definitely write a lot of comments to aid in understanding, thus increasing trust so people would try it out and tinker with it.

boomboomsubban4 hours ago

Plus the main point of this code is to have people look at it, the function is secondary to being an easter egg.

Tiberium5 hours ago

Honestly it's a bit of a shame. I checked and they could've shortened their base64 payload by 304 chars by removing all comments except the top two congratulatory ones, or by 524 if they removed those too.

OtherShrezzing5 hours ago

Would they still get the highlighted "PEACE FOR ALL" text throughout the shortened string? It looks like the length, and presence of those characters, was an explicit design choice.

lemagedurage5 hours ago

Maybe they added the comments to get a longer payload for the sake of the shirt's design.

The comments can be more cute/awe inspiring for people who aren't as familiar with bash but like solving puzzles as well.

yborg4 hours ago

The HN optimizing T-shirt compiler is the next stage here :D

saidnooneever5 hours ago

im just sad it didnt render a qr code leading to malware :'). the different ways ppl look at obfuscated codes and scripts hah

mk_stjamesan hour ago

Neat. My only critique of the script is that I would have added a

  sleep 0.1 
in the loop so that as this prints in a terminal it is actually readable; any modern terminal will scroll so fast you can't see the message in flight.

Slowing it to a 10hz refresh makes it look great.

whartungan hour ago

Maybe you can sew a patch into it?

world2vec5 hours ago

Oh wow I saw that tshirt at the store and said to my girlfriend "no way that script is functional, probably just for show". I should have persevered.

actionfromafar4 hours ago

An easy miss. :-) Most of the time our thoughts are on autopilot, since we are not calm.

nico27 minutes ago

Very cool. It reminded me of the DeCSS t-shirts, which had source code with the decryption keys for DVDs

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DeCSS

forinti2 hours ago

This reminds me of a T-shirt I once saw that read:

          perl -e '
     "$a="etbjxntqrdke";
  $a=~s/(.)/chr(ord($1)+1)/eg;
        print "$a\n;"'
It's cursing. Don't run it if it might offend you.

Upon seeing this, I decided to golf and came up with a shorter version:

  perl -e "print chr 1+ ord for split //,'etbjxntqrdke'"

librasteve2 hours ago

or

  raku -e 'say "etbjxntqrdke".comb.map({chr .ord + 1}).join'

haileys5 hours ago

I thought it was funny that the author used a variety of OCR tools with mixed success before spending a lot of time manually fixing up the output from the best one, rather than just typing it in

conductr38 minutes ago

Feels like my experienced reality of task automation in corporate environments. We routinely have engineers spend 40+ hours automating tasks that an entry level person can do manually in 10 minutes and only need to be done weekly. Automation at all costs seems to be the future

e28eta3 minutes ago

It’s certainly not a new phenomenon. I appreciate this XKCD [1], with a chart of “How long can you work on making a routine task more efficient before you’re spending more time than you save”

It’s not the final word, since automation has other benefits: documenting the procedure’s steps, reducing human errors, increasing consistency, etc.

1: https://xkcd.com/1205/

christoph5 hours ago

That was also my thought… but I grew up mashing rubber keys for hours copying “games” out of magazines and books! Then hours after fixing all the typos!

forinti2 hours ago

I spent hours typing 6502 assembly. It went a lot better when someone dictated: LDA, STA, BEQ, LDY, STY...

acters4 hours ago

I ran it through paddle paddle OCR and it flawlessly did it. Google's OCR through my phone's Google lens had also worked at getting a very good extraction but not 100% correct. Definitely would spend less time fixing it than hand copying.

IDK what the author was using but I feel like he could have shared how his OCR attempt went, but I am thinking he tried some naive OCR tools.

speererop4 hours ago

Author here - that's a good idea actually, it shouldn't be too hard to compare the various attempts. The tools I used were whatever my Android built-in is (likely Google Gemini, but I can't tell whether this is something Samsung has replaced in OneUI); tesseract; tesseract with various tweaks and charsrt restrictions; Claude; and finally, manual fixes based on disagreements between all the previous.

rtldg5 hours ago

Took me almost 2 minutes for 4 lines (and I missed a character in one of them!). I would opt for OCR too, obviously so I'm prepared for the next bash t-shirt I'd come across...

OtherShrezzing5 hours ago

I think this is a case where two people can successfully complete the task manually faster than one attempting to automate it. Get a ruler, read five centimetres of characters to your colleague, have them type it in as you go, then repeat that five centimetres back to you. Correct as you go. Format your string with the same line-breaks as the t-shirt, and remove them at the end, so you can be sure you've got the correct length on each row. Trial-and-error adjust the five-cm distance depending on your success rate as you go along

All in, you should have a non-corrupted string in 10-15 min.

grumbel4 hours ago

Gemini3.5 Flash didn't have a problem OCR'ing and base64 decoding it, despite the OCR step having errors, it just fixed them in the base64 decoding step.

mayas_5 hours ago

"just typing it" would be more error prone for the average human

speererop4 hours ago

(Author here) Yes I agree. It was a fun side-quest though. Reminds me of https://xkcd.com/1205/

duskdozer5 hours ago

I'm guilty of this, but for me this kind of thing is optimizing over annoyance rather than time.

chrysoprace4 hours ago

My old colleague had one with a Go program[0] which I always thought was quite cool.

[0] https://github.com/GL-Kageyama/UNIQLO_Akamai_T-shirt_Code

mdgld4 hours ago

I wasn’t sure if you meant a Go solver or Go the language. Would be fun if someone wrote a Go program in Go

psd13 hours ago

Or a pong clone in Racket.

ExoticPearTree4 hours ago

I got one this year with the Go code. Never actually thought it is legit code, just some random stuff.

qiqitori4 hours ago

I once wrote a tool that helps with finding mistakes in OCR'd fixed width text, https://blog.qiqitori.com/2023/03/ocring-hex-dumps-or-other-...

Basically it just clusters same characters and asks the human to find the problems, which is easy when you're looking at a series of pictures like ssssss5sss.

The UI is kinda least-effort. Should ask a modern AI agent to make it look nice and intuitive, sometime maybe.

9devan hour ago

Huh! I was sure the copy-text-from-image feature in MacOS would handle this flawlessly. But the best run I managed produced the following:

    base64: stdin: (null): error decoding base64 input stream
    #!/bin/bash
    
    # Congratulations! You found thu eastur ugg!#B��O��
    # おめでとう��M�ぇM�す!隣C��わM�サ�#ライ����見でM�������!O��
    
    # Define thu tuxt to anima|e
    text="♥PEACE♥FOR♥ALOB��PEACE♵FOR♵ALL♵PEACE♥FOR♥ALL♥PEACE♥FOR♥ALL♥PEACE♵FOR♵ALL♥"
    
    # Get termb�al dmmensions
    cols=$(tput cols)
    linus=$(tput lines)

raffael_de2 hours ago

while base64 can be considered obfuscation in this context and its inverse as decoding I can't help but feel this title is overselling and catering to a rather cyber-cheesy marketing campaign at that.

ape42 hours ago

Yeah, its a bit of a cheat. The best obfuscated C programs have the source looking like a Christmas tree (or something) and then play an xmas song (or whatever)

raffael_de2 hours ago

the base64 thing they did feels like a cheap version of that green-obscure-symbols-raining-on-a-terminal animation in The Matrix. should have gone with "Hack the Planet" instead ...

cb321an hour ago

That Matrix visual was actually specifically mentioned as an inspiration in the video by the designer being linked to/discussed elsethread (e.g. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48830326 )

[deleted]2 hours agocollapsed

NikxDaan hour ago

Super cool, especially that the code is annotated!

In case the author is reading: The decorative feather images are between 2MB to almost 5MB in size. Compression might be in order to save users time and bandwidth, and make the site look less broken while the images are partially loaded :)

DrewADesign5 hours ago

> I guess Uniqlo is run through Windows though: one thing that struck me was the font, which I’m almost certain is Consolas,

Surely this would use whatever font the virtual terminal profile was set to? I don’t know of any method to choose a virtual terminal font from bash and don’t see any code that addresses it?

nisiddharth5 hours ago

They're referring to the font on the T-shirt.

tym05 hours ago

Thank you for spelling it out for me because I thought I was looking at a completely hallucinated AI article...

speererop2 hours ago

Author here. All hallucinations are my own. Now you point it out, I see why the jump in context from the terminal back to the tshirt font would give the wrong impression.

tym02 hours ago

Honestly it was quite a whiplash to go from what looked like a good article to something that seemed completely made up. But I would chalk that up more to my reading comprehension than your writing.

felineflock38 minutes ago

Phew! I was hoping it was not a novel way of spreading a malicious script!

mgaunard29 minutes ago

how is it obfuscated? It's literally written as plain black monospace text on a white background.

Pretty sure any AI can solve it in 20 seconds.

sanmarzano16 minutes ago

It’s encoded not obfuscated. It’s even commented, which is the opposite of obfuscated. Plus it’s not really an Easter egg that was found: it is literally printed in a shirt. Easter eggs are supposed to be hidden and either only found by insider knowledge or deep investigation. This was neither.

chrisweekly2 hours ago

Great post! It's interesting, detailed but concise, and well-written. Also, I appreciate the "no cookies or tracking" and attractive, functional and performant site design.

sixtyj3 hours ago

> Interesting. I told my wife "that’s basically how people ship viruses’ and bought it.

It’s a movie plot.

pacofonixan hour ago

For a non English locale that use comma instead of dot for decimals (in my case, Spanish), this script is partially crashing. Run using something like `chmod +x shirt.sh; LC_NUMERIC=C ./shirt.sh`.

teo_zero2 hours ago

I don't know... I prefer unobfuscated text that you can immediately grok. The other day I saw this on a T-shirt:

> May the m×s/t² be with you

wyldfire2 hours ago

That "beige box" term is not the beige box I was thinking of at first.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beige_box_(phreaking)

cb3213 hours ago

For anyone that cares, this is a slightly less stupid Python version:

    #!/usr/bin/env python3
    from os   import environ; E = environ.get
    from math import sin
    from time import sleep
    text = "♥PEACE♥FOR♥ALL" # The text to sine-scroll animate
    nText  = len(text)      # Number of utf8 chars
    freq   = 0.2            # Frequency scaling factor
    color0 = 12             # xt256 Color cube segment 12..<208
    color1 = 208; nColor = color1 - color0
    (w, h) = (int(E("COLUMNS", 80)), int(E("LINES", 24)))
    t = 0
    while True:
        x = (w/2) + (w/4)*sin(t*freq)           # x pos via sine value
        x = max(0, min(w - 1, int(x + 0.5)))    # bound to tty width
        color = color0 + ((nColor*t)//h)%nColor # cycle colors
        ch = text[t%nText]  # Get char & Use xterm-256 color escs
        print("%*s\033[38;5;%sm%s\033[m\n" % (x, "", color, ch))
        t += 1
        sleep(0.1)   # original used bc shell outs to rate-limit
As mentioned in https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48830634 , the heart symbols did not otherwise even work for my bash and some have commented on liking the screen saver.

conductr27 minutes ago

You should base64 it and sell tshirts

[deleted]21 minutes agocollapsed

[deleted]5 hours agocollapsed

Gabrys12 hours ago

I don't understand the font bit. This is a terminal script, it uses the font that your terminal uses?

SebRollen39 minutes ago

They're talking about the font on the shirt

[deleted]2 hours agocollapsed

creaturemachine2 hours ago

What Bash blog would be complete without some Windows trash-talk?

_flux3 hours ago

On one hand it's nice how it's clean and commented, but on the other hand some golfing could have made the encoded block a lot more reasonable to actually manually enter.

speererop2 hours ago

It might not have filled up the whole shirt then?

puttycat3 hours ago

The comments just mean they used AI to do that in 3 seconds

brightball3 hours ago

Nice!

Might have to do something like that for a verse on the next Carolina Code Conference shirt. Been trying to figure out a good way to pull in cybersecurity.

shim__3 hours ago

Could have saved 50% with 'base64 -d | gzip -d'

speererop2 hours ago

Maybe useful for those XS sizes.

kijin4 hours ago

Well at least they're not instructing consumers to run curl | bash.

That's better than half the tech howtos out there.

INTPenis4 hours ago

No, they're instructing their customers to run unknown base64 encoded code instead. :D

bigfishrunning2 hours ago

They should have just had the base64 block and forced you to decode and read it before running it, rather then having the `eval` bit at the beginning...

kijin34 minutes ago

But that wouldn't have looked like a bash script, only a random sequence of characters. The shebang at the start definitely contributes to the geek factor.

khernandezrt2 hours ago

Ive been to 3 Uniqlos in my are and i havent been blessed with a bash shirt :(

dolmen28 minutes ago

Consider ordering online. I see the product in the Uniqlo France store: https://www.uniqlo.com/fr/fr/products/E480814-000/00?colorDi...

preetham_rangu4 hours ago

The real threat model here isn't the base64 payload, it's Uniqlo turning a T-shirt into a QR code that requires a human OCR pipeline to redeem.

high_byte6 hours ago

what if it contained a zero day for tesseract and the script you thought you got is just a throwaway

[deleted]4 hours agocollapsed

dylanzhangdev5 hours ago

Cool! I bought one a few months ago as soon as I spotted it at a Uniqlo store, and later ordered a larger size online—I really love wearing them. But it never occurred to me to look into the story behind them.

l337h4x0rz5 hours ago

there's no newline between the shebang and the actual code

alexpotato3 hours ago

Fascinating that we have base64 but not error correction for it!

brazzy4 hours ago

After being primed by the article, I read the author's name as "Shirtliker"...

speererop2 hours ago

That's a new one and oddly apt :)

willejs3 hours ago

Looks like it has a few shellcheck issues, and no set -euo pipefail? ;)

doppp5 hours ago

Thanks for the post! Love Easter Eggs like these!

khurs4 hours ago

Brilliant marketing when you can get people to pay to walk around advertising with your logo!!

FijiBY4 hours ago

Nice investigation, thx

icevl5 hours ago

Base64 without error correction turns the t-shirt itself into a lossy transport layer, so the OCR/transcription step becomes the actual challenge.

tantalor3 hours ago

TIL Consolas is a Windows font

moralestapiaan hour ago

Thanks for doing this, I almost bought it just to decode it, lol.

breppp4 hours ago

Feels very reminiscent of the style of old DeCSS tshirts

https://www.wired.com/2000/08/court-to-address-decss-t-shirt...

thomaslwangan hour ago

[dead]

devnull8103 hours ago

[dead]

tancop5 hours ago

[dead]

huflungdung3 hours ago

[dead]

BeatrizPerez2 hours ago

[dead]

lloydatkinson5 hours ago

P ./cool.sh: line 31: bc: command not found ./cool.sh: line 34: bc: command not found ./cool.sh: line 37: bc: command not found E ./cool.sh: line 31: bc: command not found ./cool.sh: line 34: bc: command not found ./cool.sh: line 37: bc: command not found

Very wow. Shame they assumed everyone has "bc"...

em5005 hours ago

Why would that be a shame? "bc" is a mandatory POSIX command, while /bin/bash isn't (/bin/sh is the standard).

[deleted]5 hours agocollapsed

greazy5 hours ago

Which distro are you running? Perchance did you run the shell script in alpine Linux (docker)?

piacos_5 hours ago

it doesn't seem to be installed on my endeavouros laptop

[deleted]4 hours agocollapsed

lloydatkinson4 hours ago

Debian.

comradesmith5 hours ago

You are fun.

lloydatkinson4 hours ago

Are we really at the "redditor insult" type comments stage of HN now? There is nothing wrong with saying a piece of code is broken.

deciduously3 hours ago

Broken seems a little hyperbolic, it has an implicit dependency on a standard POSIX tool.

lloydatkinson2 hours ago

I suppose, but my Debian didn’t seem to ship with it.

[deleted]3 hours agocollapsed

koiueo3 hours ago

> I ran OCR in a few ways: First, using the built-in OCR of the circle-to-search feature on Android, which is often very good. Second, by using Tesseract with a few options and tweaks. And third by running it through Claude. After diffing the three to look for mismatches and getting Claude to output a table of locations for quick scanning, it became trivial but time-consuimg to tidy up the remainder

I bet 10$ I'd spend less time typing it from the t-shirt. And I wouldn't boil two kettles of water in the process.

But hey, AI makes you 10x more productive, I suppose

speererop2 hours ago

(Author here) for unrelated reasons my typing is very slow at the moment, so I was keen to automate. I see that people are getting different results from Claude than I did though.

freedomben2 hours ago

You may want to retract that bet: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48830846

koiueo2 hours ago

Yeah, I read that later.

My bet is against manual OCR with various engines + finding mistakes later using an LLM.

bigfishrunning2 hours ago

I'd rather find the mistakes with my human brain. Keeps me limber. I might even accidentally learn something.

bryanrasmussen6 hours ago

Why does the shirt have an obfuscated bash script on the back?

Tiberium6 hours ago

Because it's by Akamai, the blog links to https://www.akamai.com/newsroom/press-release/uniqlo-adds-ne...

kay_o6 hours ago

Uniqlo frequently does collaborations. This was one with a tech company

wbh15 hours ago

It's at least the second one that Akamai's done, although I like this newest one the most.

The old one was: https://www.uniqlo.com/us/en/products/E459561-000/00

pezezin4 hours ago

I have both of them and wear them to work regularly xD

The guy who founded the new political party Team Mirai also wears it frequently: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Takahiro_Anno

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