Hacking a weird TV censoring device

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  • Опубліковано 14 тра 2024
  • Here is the complete list of words I extracted: docs.google.com/spreadsheets/...
    And the original video from @TechnologyConnections: • This TV gadget censors...
    Support these videos on Patreon: / beneater or eater.net/support for other ways to support.
    Timestamps:
    0:00 - What is the TV Guardian
    0:50 - Circuit board analysis
    3:15 - Removing and connecting to the ROM
    6:10 - Extracting data from the ROM
    14:22 - Analyzing the contents of the ROM
    ------------------
    Social media:
    Website: www.eater.net
    Twitter: / ben_eater
    Patreon: / beneater
    Reddit: / beneater
    Special thanks to these supporters for making this video possible:
    Adrien Friggeri, Aleksey Smolenchuk, Alex, Alex Black, Andrew Van Gerpen, anula, Ben, Ben Cochran, Ben Kamens, Ben Williams, Bill Cooksey, Binh Tran, Богдан Федоров, Bradley Stach, Burt Humburg, Carl Fooks, Carsten Schwender, Chai, Chaitanya Bhatt, Chris Lajoie, Chris Sachs, criis, Daniel Jeppsson, Daniel Pink, Daniel Tang, Dave Burley, Dave Walter, David Clark, David Cox, David Dawkins, David House, David Sastre Medina, David Turner, Dean Bevan, Dean Winger, Deep Kalra, Dennis Henderson, Dennis Schubert, Dilip Gowda, Dušan Dželebdžić, Dustin Campbell, Dzevad Trumic, Emilio Mendoza, Eric Dynowski, Erik Broeders, Erik Granlund, Ethan Sifferman, Eugene Bulkin, Evan Thayer, Eveli László, Evin Dunn, Florian Rian, fxshlein, George Miroshnykov, ghostdunk, GusGold, Humberto Bruni, Ingo Eble, Isaac Parker, Jacob Ford, Jakob Dannesboe, James Beldock, James Capuder, Jared Dziedzic, Jason Bowen, Jason DeStefano, Jason Dew, JavaXP, Jaxon Ketterman, jemmons, Jeremy, Jeremy Cole, Jesse Miller, Jim Kelly, Jim Knowler, Joe Beda, Joe Pregracke, Joe Rork, Joel Miller, John Hamberger jn., John Henning, John Meade, John Phelan, Jon Dugan, Jonn Miller, Joseph Portaro, Jurģis Brigmanis, Justin Graziani, Kai Wells, Kefen, Kenneth Christensen, Kyle Kellogg, Lambda GPU Workstations, Larry, László Bácsi, Leo K, Lithou, Lukasz Pacholik, Marcos Fujisawa, Marcus Classon, Mark Day, Martin Noble, Mats Fredriksson, Matthäus Pawelczyk, melvin2001, Michael Koreshkov, MICHAEL SLASS, Michael Tedder, Michael Timbrook, Michael Weitman, Miguel Ríos, mikebad, Mikel Lindsaar, Miles Macchiaroli, Muqeet Mujahid, Nate Welch, Nicholas Counts, Nicholas Moresco, Nick Chapman, Oli Homer, Ori Shamir, Örn Arnarson, Paul Heller, Paul Pluzhnikov, Pete Dietl, Phil Dennis, Philip Hofstetter, Porus, ProgrammerDor, Ralph Irons, Randal Masutani, Randy True, raoulvp, real_huitz, ReJ aka Renaldas Zioma, Ric King, Rick Hennigan, Robert Diaz, Robey Pointer, Sagnik Bhattacharya, Scott Gorlick, Scott Holmes, Sean Patrick O’Brien, Sergey Kruk, solderspot, SonOfSofaman, Spencer Ruport, Splashtwist, Stefan Nesinger, Stefanus Du Toit, Stephen Kovalcik, Stephen Riley, Steve Jones, TheWebMachine, Thomas Eriksen, Tim Oriol, Tim Walkowski, Tim Wheeler, Tom, Tom Knowles, Tom Smith, Tyler Latham, Vincent Bernat, Walter Montalvo, Warren Miller, Wim Coekaerts, Wraithan McCarroll, xisente, Yee Lam Wan

КОМЕНТАРІ • 5 тис.

  • @TechnologyConnections
    @TechnologyConnections Рік тому +28316

    Well, this is ' delightful! A triumph for science. Thank you!

    • @Honzecki
      @Honzecki Рік тому +888

      Unexpected interaction 👀

    • @davidgarcia2016
      @davidgarcia2016 Рік тому +1426

      This is the crossover I didn't know I wanted

    • @wcvp
      @wcvp Рік тому +194

      Lol I was going to send this video to you, glad I checked the comments first

    • @electronash
      @electronash Рік тому +228

      Technology Connections - did you get chance to read any of the twitter threads by foone yet?
      They did a full disassembly of the TV Guardian code. ;)
      EDIT: I may have been wrong about the full "disassembly", but I haven't looked at it in-depth again for a while.
      They also just bought one of the newer devices two weeks ago, and dumped the ROM from that.
      A very interesting device, and also hilarious.

    • @Dragon-xd9em
      @Dragon-xd9em Рік тому +16

      Ay you are here!

  • @messyhair42
    @messyhair42 Рік тому +3626

    Ah, yes, my favorite classic film actor, Jerk van Gay

    • @kreuner11
      @kreuner11 Рік тому +110

      Clbuttic!

    • @ohasis8331
      @ohasis8331 Рік тому +146

      almost as good as Penus van Lesbian

    • @SGresponse
      @SGresponse Рік тому +139

      "It's the >bleep< van >bleep< show, starring >bleep< van >bleep

    • @IceMetalPunk
      @IceMetalPunk Рік тому +3

      @@ohasis8331 #WhoseLine!

    • @davidgillies620
      @davidgillies620 Рік тому +61

      His Jerkney accent in Mary Poppins was terrible, though.

  • @ogami1972
    @ogami1972 Рік тому +3462

    First Im like "oh, cool, this guy likes Technology Connections, he must be smart and cool". Then I'm impressed by your knowledge and soldering skills. Then I'm intimidated by your programming skills. Finally I am humbled by your other-worldly spreadsheet mastery. You're some sort of Nerd God.

    • @superintendent1152
      @superintendent1152 Рік тому +190

      he is the final boss

    • @morganfreeman8208
      @morganfreeman8208 11 місяців тому +123

      Frfr I’m shitting and crying rn

    • @ddcddc_
      @ddcddc_ 11 місяців тому +98

      Wait until you see the breadboards

    • @CalebFuel
      @CalebFuel 11 місяців тому +114

      @@morganfreeman8208 This video literally made me go take a shit in consternation as i was just trying to fathom wtf he just did in excel....Did he invent Excel?

    • @Imperial_Squid
      @Imperial_Squid 11 місяців тому +57

      ​@@CalebFuelgo watch him make a graphics card on a breadboard, it's incredibly humbling stuff and fucking *_fascinating_* to see him build it from the ground up

  • @idkstudios3768
    @idkstudios3768 Місяць тому +52

    I wanna see the TV attacker.
    It just replaces every third word with obscenities.

  • @Eliasdbr
    @Eliasdbr Рік тому +7087

    Is anyone gonna mention the amount of skill this man has with spreadsheet functions?

    • @khatharrmalkavian3306
      @khatharrmalkavian3306 Рік тому +804

      I decided a long time ago that he's omniscient.

    • @asteroidrules
      @asteroidrules Рік тому +348

      Given everything we know about his programming ability, I'm not surprised in the slightest.

    • @chriskaprys
      @chriskaprys Рік тому +343

      No bit is safe from Ben's fingertips.

    • @JosephDavies
      @JosephDavies Рік тому +175

      I imagine Matt Parker would be quite pleased with this demonstration.

    • @yoced
      @yoced Рік тому +18

      Im astounded

  • @bj_
    @bj_ Рік тому +4672

    13:04 I don't know what I was expecting, but I've never seen a chip respond with such hostility to being probed

    • @csours
      @csours Рік тому +383

      Reminds me a story: Many years ago, as a joke, my high school programming teacher had a program spit out "DONT TOUCH ME THERE" when a certain button was clicked. It made it to a non-technical user who freaked out. I'd love to put "DONT TOUCH ME THERE" on a ROM

    • @Valkhiya
      @Valkhiya Рік тому +304

      I was laughing to myself the whole time it built up to that imagining him running the program and the console just saying "Fuck"

    • @BobHolowenko
      @BobHolowenko Рік тому +138

      Underrated comment. I HOWLED with laughter at this. I have never seen such an angry chip :P

    • @ohasis8331
      @ohasis8331 Рік тому +26

      Huh, imagine how a person feels after being beamed aboard, tagged and released.😀

    • @IvnSoft
      @IvnSoft Рік тому +31

      @@csours UuuUuUu. Ive put ominous short msgs in the remaining bytes of a rom.
      Fun 🙃

  • @lordchiopet1630
    @lordchiopet1630 5 місяців тому +266

    This feels like i asked a wizard a question and now I've been listening to them talk about things beyond mortal comprehension. Also huge props to maintaining the pacing of the video. This is slow stuff and keeping it snappy is really cool

    • @phillyphakename1255
      @phillyphakename1255 4 місяці тому +8

      I'm at the "I know what all of those words mean, individually" stage.
      Sure, I've used microcontrollers, I've played around with doing digital read/write operations on an Arduino. I've seen LM358s and 393s, I've done spreadsheet formulas.
      But putting them all together in a cohesive hackable format to make a high quality video? Never done before in the real world.

    • @aqdrobert
      @aqdrobert 2 місяці тому

      Stargate
      O'Neill: Carter. Use little words. OK?

    • @jamiekent1970
      @jamiekent1970 Місяць тому

      You got it… straight over my head 😂

  • @jembawls
    @jembawls Рік тому +539

    Ben just casually talking Computer Science with all those words on the screen was too funny 😂

  • @yellowticket9673
    @yellowticket9673 Рік тому +5082

    Can you imagine the guy who built and sold the TV Guardian, seeing a sudden jump in sales 30 years later...

    • @blackbird1234100
      @blackbird1234100 Рік тому +71

      @@nsa3967 yep. 3 dots on the comment -> report -> spam

    • @tingtang9302
      @tingtang9302 Рік тому +56

      ebay sales? cmon man think

    • @yellowticket9673
      @yellowticket9673 Рік тому +217

      @@tingtang9302 No shit Sherlock. Isn't it funnier to think that the guy who created the device is in control of all sales of his device, and sees 2 random sales of The Guardian in 2022, and it makes him scratch his head? C'mon man, imagine!

    • @thall146
      @thall146 Рік тому +12

      @@yellowticket9673 MEGA FUNNY HAHA

    • @Nerfyy
      @Nerfyy Рік тому +62

      He'd Say... "HOLY BEEEEEEEEP"

  • @Llohr
    @Llohr Рік тому +3465

    This was a really elaborate way to slap a whole bunch of "bad words" in a youtube video. Nice work.

    • @MichaelRogersJesusrules
      @MichaelRogersJesusrules Рік тому +46

      Imagine being one in said board room and coming across this decades later~~~backk to the future~~and sad how far we have come in not caring about those words ,i use to get belted if i used most of them lol.

    • @jtbrownful
      @jtbrownful Рік тому +24

      @@MichaelRogersJesusrulesI was the same as a kid. Eventually my parents just said as I got older that there is a time and place. I barely swear now unless I’m pain lol

    • @ctlaurin
      @ctlaurin Рік тому +10

      He's reacting to the bad words in the medium of spreadsheet.

    • @cre8iveone699
      @cre8iveone699 Рік тому +7

      I'm more interested in seeing this thing work?

    • @pawef9049
      @pawef9049 Рік тому

      My friends from IT put even more effort to attach some tits into scientific publication XD

  • @MadMathMike
    @MadMathMike Рік тому +240

    I grew up in a strict, religious household, and we had one of these for a while. My siblings and I frequently found the word replacements pretty funny, and sometimes completely nonsensical. Of course, the whole concept of this device is nonsensical to me now. 😂 Any way, it is super cool to see under the hood of this contraption decades later. Thanks for posting this! 👍😊

    • @thedmiynV9ll
      @thedmiynV9ll 10 місяців тому +2

      bc 2/10

    • @krozareq
      @krozareq 10 місяців тому +6

      I'm assuming since live programming has such delayed closed captioning that the audio censoring wouldn't activate at the right time (or wrong time, depending on how you see it). Was that the case?

    • @kurtnowak8895
      @kurtnowak8895 9 місяців тому +2

      Came here for this question! Cc does not always follow the audio. How does it know when to replace the naughty word? Then, how did it “play” the word? Was there a voice synthesizer?

    • @krozareq
      @krozareq 9 місяців тому +15

      @@kurtnowak8895 It just cut off audio for the duration of the CC prompt output that contained one or more of the filtered terms and removed or replaced it in the CC output. Voice synthesizers in the 1980s would've needed beefy hardware and even then it would've sounded like Stephen Hawking.

    • @shawnsustrich7981
      @shawnsustrich7981 9 місяців тому +1

      @@williampotter3369 Using Mariachi is like "This is what happens when you find a stranger in the alps"

  • @albac0re
    @albac0re Рік тому

    This is the first one of your videos I have watched. Your absolute step by step is so entertaining to watch. Thank you for being so thorough!

  • @jonathankorman4031
    @jonathankorman4031 Рік тому +2329

    It's hilarious to me that in the effort to keep (arbitrarily) naughty words out of one's home, you could buy a device that sat quietly in your home, secretly filled with profanities and blasphemy, whispering them to itself every cycle

    • @nepdisc3722
      @nepdisc3722 Рік тому +18

      the FUCKSHITPISS machine in the corner

    • @Nitidus
      @Nitidus Рік тому +7

      Ultra Christian household having their secretly heretical little tool sitting by their TV... slowly infiltrating. Of course they're in strict mode, and when watching their favorite televangelist hold another one of their hypocritical sermons, suddenly every mention of Christ gets censored. Lol.

    • @foxsicle
      @foxsicle Рік тому +24

      😂🤭

    • @TheDavidlloydjones
      @TheDavidlloydjones Рік тому +58

      Jonathan,
      That's the internal part of human progress.
      The external part is that at the wavelength of television, Earth is a bright star.
      To the rest of the galaxy we are the proud proclaimers of Hitler opening the Olympic Games, followed by a generation of "I Love lucy."

    • @foxsicle
      @foxsicle Рік тому +10

      @@TheDavidlloydjones Guhhee.. *attempts what little he recalls of that anxious collar tug-jerk reaction lucy does?*

  • @kedo
    @kedo Рік тому +1878

    Now that we know how this works, it wouldn't be too hard to rewrite the EEPROM to basically make a reversal device that would take G-rated words and replace them with unsavory ones. Run your old tapes of Barney the dinosaur through that version and never sleep well again. I suppose if you did that and then twitch streamed it, you could make some good money.

    • @Klabbity_Kloots
      @Klabbity_Kloots Рік тому +57

      But, then we would have more outputs than inputs. Breaking the first rule of functions, my man.

    • @thefreedomguyuk
      @thefreedomguyuk Рік тому +98

      ​@@Klabbity_Kloots Not necessarily. Select SOME words, not ALL words.
      You're forgetting were ALL geeks on here 🤣👍

    • @Klabbity_Kloots
      @Klabbity_Kloots Рік тому +37

      @@thefreedomguyuk Damn, you got me. How 'bout we have a randomizer for the rest. For example, if "MF" and "CS" both go to "jerk", in T.V. Reality, the latter can go to either of the former. Sort of like a logarithmic function, but less controlled.

    • @Klabbity_Kloots
      @Klabbity_Kloots Рік тому +5

      @@thefreedomguyuk Or just omit all but one output for each euphemism like an actual logarithmic function.

    • @JJ-qo7th
      @JJ-qo7th Рік тому +33

      Just watch the video where The Count from Sesame Street is singing about how much he loves *counting* things, where *count* is bleeped. I'd post the link, but y'all have a search bar. You shouldn't trust links from internet strangers.

  • @GordonChil
    @GordonChil Рік тому +12

    This was amazing to watch. I do only a little programming in C every now and then. And watching how you do bit manipulation with ease is very satisfying.

  • @nevermindmeijustinjectedaw9988
    @nevermindmeijustinjectedaw9988 Рік тому +31

    holy cow this is incredibly sophisticated for the 80s
    okay, maybe not the software and the library itself, but the fact that you got closed captions on your tv as a default and it put the two together live in front of you, making all of this even possible in the first place...i grew up in a non-english speaking country so defo had none of this going on even in the early '00s which is when i quit watching tv for good.
    i'm impressed and now once again wished i was born earlier, eventhough i know it's better to be born later for many more important reasons.

    • @phillyphakename1255
      @phillyphakename1255 4 місяці тому +2

      Old fashioned TV is almost magical to me. The NTSC protocol, live editing of video/audio with very simple chips, all of it.

    • @nevermindmeijustinjectedaw9988
      @nevermindmeijustinjectedaw9988 4 місяці тому +2

      @@phillyphakename1255 it really is. fun fact: early pro gamers continued using giant crt monitors instead of early lcd bc of the noticable delay the liquid crystals used to have. if you move your mouse rapidly left and right, you'll notice how the pointer on screen lags behind the mouse in your hand. crt monitors never had this problem bc they were working with the literal speed of light. well, unless your computer was just too slow to calculate the mouse movements, that is. and let's be real, everyone had all kinds of malware and bloatware everywhere. god windows 2000 sucked. and i've used the constantly crashing windows 95, too. 98 reigned supreme till xp, the real g that never let me down unlike literally every other windows version out there.

    • @gawkthimm6030
      @gawkthimm6030 4 місяці тому +1

      @@nevermindmeijustinjectedaw9988 I had a competitive gamer friend like that

    • @stpedro-ht9ng
      @stpedro-ht9ng 3 місяці тому

      @@nevermindmeijustinjectedaw9988
      CRT displays are still preferred for Super Smash Bros tournaments.

    • @nevermindmeijustinjectedaw9988
      @nevermindmeijustinjectedaw9988 3 місяці тому +1

      @@stpedro-ht9ng why? the time of sub-4ms lag on non-crt displays has long come

  • @dundermifflinity
    @dundermifflinity Рік тому +2213

    Jerk van Gay made me laugh far more than it should have.
    Great video. Hats off to you, sir.

    • @dan8t669
      @dan8t669 Рік тому +42

      this might move into my daily vocabulary

    • @ajlakanen
      @ajlakanen Рік тому +8

      That was hilarious :D:D

    • @chaz720
      @chaz720 Рік тому +31

      Background: I had seen the Technology Connections video back when it came out; I'm a BSEE/MSEE with 20 years in industry who (for some reason) only stumbled upon Ben Eater's channel this evening.
      I had trouble explaining to my wife just now why I was laughing so hard... "No, because when they were testing it, it would have turned Dick Van Dyke's name into Jerk Van Gay and they would have seen that and said a bunch of things they'd need to censor." It's the kind of ridiculous secondary problem you only truly appreciate as an engineer, and it rises above foul language.

    • @Carhill
      @Carhill Рік тому +4

      Likewise. It was so unexpected.

    • @cetyl2626
      @cetyl2626 Рік тому +11

      @@chaz720 And it made me wonder, did they catch this in testing- "let's test against wholesome shows our customer probably watches in case it produces false positives" and Dick Van Dyke is what came to mind or did they get customer complaints (from customers watching wholesome shows like Dick Van Dyke) or when the engineer added d*ck their mind led them to think, "gee... that, you knoelw, could be a valid name.... like Dick Van Dyke.... oh geez!". Ben is right, that is a hilarious rabbit hole the engineer had to deal with.

  • @maurofoti526
    @maurofoti526 Рік тому +1775

    In Technology Connection's video (at time 7:07), you can see that the Guardian removes articles attached to the foul word (in that cases it censores "What the fuck is that?" into "What is that?"). The whitelisted words are all articles (the, that, those) that would have to be removed to maintain the sense of the phrase. Probably for the microcontroller firmware, the fact that the word is whitelisted and has a substition bit (0x1) flags it as "if encountered before a foul work, also remove that article"

    • @JdeBP
      @JdeBP Рік тому +87

      No. As I mentioned in another comment, "the fuck" is explicitly detected and replaced. There's no grammar analysis going on.

    • @inothome
      @inothome Рік тому +5

      You may be on to something there!

    • @jort93z
      @jort93z Рік тому +249

      @@inothome Nah, the solution is obvious.
      Its for dick and woody(the two words with a 01 after them).
      If they have any of these words in front of them, they are blocked, if not, they are used as names and not blocked.

    • @CommodoreGreg
      @CommodoreGreg Рік тому +19

      @@jort93z Up vote. This is the reasonable conclusion.

    • @TJStellmach
      @TJStellmach Рік тому +73

      @@jort93z ... which suggests that "Dick Van" needs to be explicitly whitelisted only to handle cases like "The Dick Van Dyke Show."

  • @Valiante1982
    @Valiante1982 Рік тому +4

    This video was randomly recommended to me by UA-cam's algorithm, and I'm beyond delighted that it did - this was easily my favourite video for a very long time. What a fantastic process to witness.

  • @stanweaver
    @stanweaver Рік тому +5

    With a friends help, I was able to get the word and phrase list off of my old TV Guardian years ago. It became obsolete once RCA cables were not in use anymore). My friend was able to "bake" the chip off the board and download the code. When he got the list of offensive words and phrases, he told me to come to his desk because there was NO WAY he was sending it in an email. We laughed at a lot of the phrases because we honestly did no know what some of the 400+ words and phrases were.

  • @soobasis
    @soobasis Рік тому +1285

    you are the only one who breaks down technology every bit by bit, just to let us understand. Thank you man, you are the best teacher.

    • @ArmiaKhairy
      @ArmiaKhairy Рік тому +32

      quite literally

    • @parp
      @parp Рік тому +4

      @@ArmiaKhairy I get it!

    • @whannabi
      @whannabi Рік тому +5

      Pun intended

    • @Kyuhll
      @Kyuhll Рік тому +4

      Byte by byte ;]

    • @monhi64
      @monhi64 Рік тому +3

      Hey now, not the only one. Technology connections goes just as in depth. Theres definitely a reason he featured him at the beginning of this video

  • @Enderbro3300
    @Enderbro3300 Місяць тому +1

    I'm working with a lot of serial at my job recently and it feels so fucking cool to actually keep pace and understand COMPLETELY what you're doing.

  • @DobieTanpaw
    @DobieTanpaw Рік тому +1

    And yet again, UA-cam's algorithm finds me another channel to subscribe to. That was some great work there, and I love that you decided to, basically, build your own EEPROM reader.

  • @stephen3164
    @stephen3164 Рік тому +1579

    Watched the original video on how it works. I think for “the”, if it is before a “naughty word”, it will eliminate it. So “what the f” just becomes “what”. But if no naughty word follows, then “the” is allowed. Possibly the 01 and 02 could indicate searching for a naughty word after or before the regular word. Hence “F you” would return blank, instead of “you”.
    Now, with that said, if you enable write on the chip, you could create a reverse device that takes pg rated dialogue and spices it up a bit!
    What does the other chip do?

    • @helloimbrettgreen
      @helloimbrettgreen Рік тому +126

      this is what i was hoping "hacking" it entailed when i clicked on the video

    • @gavmansworkshop5624
      @gavmansworkshop5624 Рік тому +21

      @@helloimbrettgreen yea imagine spongebob 🤣

    • @solarflyspeedruns7585
      @solarflyspeedruns7585 Рік тому +56

      @@gavmansworkshop5624 what the f### are you doing Patrick? Oh Im fu##### the dog

    • @EebstertheGreat
      @EebstertheGreat Рік тому +28

      If you check out the spreadsheet, "the fuck" is already explicitly listed. It seems like if they had a general method for removing particles before censored words, they wouldn't need that entry.

    • @Cypher10110
      @Cypher10110 Рік тому +22

      @EebstertheGreat maybe "the fuck" warranted a specific substitution but others like "the shit" or "the hell" benefited from more general substitutions.
      If we saw the code, I'm sure there would be a priority order of operations, where it looks to make substitutions in a certain order.
      Was kinda hoping he was going to tinker with the substitution list haha.

  • @MrMegaManFan
    @MrMegaManFan 8 місяців тому +10

    I’m a big fan of Technology Connections so even seeing this video 8 months after you made it, I still appreciate that you picked up on what he talked about and ran with it. Thank you!

  • @ytphillipsbros
    @ytphillipsbros Місяць тому

    I’ve never even heard of you before, this randomly appeared on my recommended - absolutely loved it!

  • @wayne_logan
    @wayne_logan Рік тому +552

    I started watching your videos about three years ago and my reaction was usually, "what sorcery is this!" I am now finishing my second year in electrical and electronics engineering (you can guess who is partly to blame for this decision 😂) and for the first time, I can say that I understood everything you did. You are such an inspiration. A role model too while at it. You sort of make embedded systems accessible en masse. Like an adult explaining a math problem to you, but it involves ICs and bitwise operations. lol ❤

    • @SpaghettiEnterprises
      @SpaghettiEnterprises Рік тому +7

      I remember those days. Thankfully there is so much to learn that even two years after graduating there are still many tricks you can pick up

    • @MadScientist267
      @MadScientist267 Рік тому +1

      Where was this channel in the 80s when I'd have really been using most of it...
      Oh right.. 🤣

    • @MadScientist267
      @MadScientist267 Рік тому +1

      @@SpaghettiEnterprises Schools don't cover real life.

    • @florkgagga
      @florkgagga Рік тому +1

      @@MadScientist267 I beg to differ Mr. Mad S. there definitely are ways to learn something in school that you can use in real life! Oh, I'm in Europe, maybe there's no point... but seriously, back then, I was a teen in the 80s, in high school (I guess, we call it middle school, age 14-18) i was studying to be an electronics technician. Didn't make much of it, after all it was in a slightly underdeveloped country where the proliferation of tech progress was sort of tied to political affiliations so the teachers were not super motivated to invest into really getting us up to spot. But, there were ways to get past that, for example if i only knew how important the proper instruments were, including soldering stations with all the gadgets, we could have organized so every one in class gets what we can and organize sharing equipment that was too expensive to get individually. And go on with sourcing chips and other stuff that goes on a pcb from throwaway stuff. Even in Yugoslavia it was not impossible to get microprocessors from the 70s, if I only knew how important that was, alas I saw most of it as a chore to chew through, ofc lamenting that we had to study so much other stuff, like history and biology and whatnot. I was envious of the american school system, at least what we saw in movies, they seem much more project oriented as opposed to pronounced "ex cathedra" teaching that I experienced, but there were ways to hack oneself to proper education. I think even today it helps if a kid that's bright but not too fond of school (like my 11yo) focuses on the 2-4 teachers and their subjects that they like and treats the others like assistants. And there you have real life, figuring out how to talk to teachers is much like later talking to colleagues and superiors.

    • @MadScientist267
      @MadScientist267 Рік тому

      @@florkgagga Schools teach principles. Not real world. I'm sorry but it's just how it is. I'm not negating their place in the mix... But attempts to blow smoke up my ass aren't going to work, when I've seen time after time after time where it failed to meet expectations in the real world.
      As an old boss put it more than once, "take the paperwork into the bathroom, it'll serve better there". His point was you can't teach critical thinking, and all the school in the world can't make up the difference.
      People either got it or they don't, and the information alone is useless. Without the critical thinking, watching someone try to apply the knowledge would be much funnier if it wasn't so sad. People pigeon hole themselves into positions they can't handle all the time... I've seen enough of it that I don't even care to work anymore until the educational systems are reformed.
      Passionate usually wins over educated in my experience. The difference is in what the drive is for... One is seeking to expand their universe and make a difference in ours in the process, the other just saw the numbers and wanted the check.

  • @ikkuranus
    @ikkuranus Рік тому +2096

    So, do you have any plans to modify the word list and make a follow-up video? I think it would be funny to have a TV guardian which replaces common words with profanity

    • @ETXAlienRobot201
      @ETXAlienRobot201 Рік тому +364

      market it as the tv defiler or something :P

    • @jayare1933
      @jayare1933 Рік тому +82

      I support this! I mean what is a simple ground wire between pins right?

    • @Dasepho
      @Dasepho Рік тому +75

      This would be a perfect conclusion to the story. Here it might be a way into deciphering the exact replacement scheme, or if Technology Connections wants to colab it also fits the discussion of wider social impact

    • @dimitarnikolov3527
      @dimitarnikolov3527 Рік тому +56

      And then use a text to speech software to dub over the video. Then you can automate the entire process and have a device that automatically generates youtube videos for you.
      The uploading to youtube can also be automated. But of course you'll get a ton of copyright strikes and be demonetized for containing swear words.
      It still will be fun tho

    • @DcMag
      @DcMag Рік тому +8

      Hahahaha thats the best option.

  • @cbhiii
    @cbhiii Рік тому +46

    I just love your video content and the methodical way you present them. I can imagine they’re quite time consuming to make, but would love to see more. Thanks.

    • @rajveersingh2056
      @rajveersingh2056 8 місяців тому +3

      Why 4.99,
      That's a pricing strategy, used malls to make it seem not $5... So it feels cheaper...
      What's your reasoning.

    • @rajveersingh2056
      @rajveersingh2056 8 місяців тому

      @cbhiii

    • @markanderson2904
      @markanderson2904 2 місяці тому

      @@rajveersingh2056 You're right. It's just a cliche. Marketers have "normalized" pricing to that some people don't even think of even-dollar prices anymore. Just look at gasoline: 2.919 so it doesn't look like 2.92.

    • @Podracer1000
      @Podracer1000 2 місяці тому

      Who cares? ​@@rajveersingh2056

  • @rohandat
    @rohandat Рік тому +1

    dude I love your chanel, thank you for posting!

  • @nicholascary6859
    @nicholascary6859 Рік тому +609

    I work in the closed captioning industry developing hardware and its really cool to see how things were handled then vs now with relatively simple hardware!

    • @jayd1687a
      @jayd1687a Рік тому +26

      CC is an example of an disability assistive service that has had a massive benefit to all of society. Thank you for fostering the value CC gives all of us.

    • @voidex136
      @voidex136 Рік тому +2

      What is the point of this device if it only removes captions, but audio stays the same

    • @Michael-kp4bd
      @Michael-kp4bd Рік тому +28

      @@voidex136 I’d have to go back through the whole video again, but I think the device has the ability to silence the audio when it detects a “bad word”
      I’m suspicious of this because I don’t think the audio and closed captioning would be perfectly synced as to bleep words right when they’re happening…. It would instead have to block a whole section of rendered CC, or take really difficult to calculate guess as to when that particular word was said. I don’t think CC is encoded with enough granularity to pull it off…
      I’m sure a few things i said here are incorrect so i hope someone can give you a better answer.
      (It’ll probably help us both to just go watch Technology Connection’s video because he apparently showcased exactly what this device does!)

    • @voidex136
      @voidex136 Рік тому

      @@Michael-kp4bd that makes sense, thank you

    • @Michael-kp4bd
      @Michael-kp4bd Рік тому +16

      @@voidex136 just got to watching the referenced video - and indeed, if there’s ever a detected bad word in a rendered “chunk” of closed captioning, it mutes the ENTIRE duration corresponding that chunk.
      So yeah, it generally mutes when there’s a bad word detected. But its granularity is limited to the entire “chunk” of Closed Captioning rendered to the screen at once (often a whole sentence), so… it mutes large gaps. But of course, it gives you some very inoffensive text to read during that time 😆 and that’s what it set out to achieve

  • @PElder78
    @PElder78 Рік тому +403

    At a glance, I would say the 0x2 is telling it to look at the prior word, to sensor both. Which is why 'Balls' has a 0x2, to sensor, say, 'Hairy Balls' or whatever. However 'Tennis B' is explicitly whitelisted as an exemption. 0x01 probably does the same but for the word after, so 'Dick' would block 'Dick Head', which explains the exemption for 'Dick van'.

    • @EebstertheGreat
      @EebstertheGreat Рік тому +19

      You would need to whitelist those anyway, because "tennis balls" would match the filtered word "balls," muting the audio and turning it into "tennis tail." Same with "jerk van."
      01 only marks "dick" and "woody," which are also names. I wonder if there is a connection there. For instance, it might check if the word is capitalized, in which case it's probably a name. I can't see a connection for 02 words. I don't think it censors words that come before them. In your example, "hairy tail" is totally acceptable, and it wouldn't make sense for "Now you're pissing me off" to be replaced by "Now teeing me off," for instance.

    • @greenaum
      @greenaum Рік тому

      @@EebstertheGreat "I've just teed myself. My pants are soaked in tee." "Dick Van Door-to-Door Dildo supplies ltd" would be another nice one to slip past. "Our lesbian orgy is due to start in 5 minutes and everyone forgot to bring toys!" "Time to call... the dick van dyke!"

    • @DustyyBoi
      @DustyyBoi 8 місяців тому +1

      ​@@EebstertheGreatWoody from toy story 1 got censored

    • @MrWolfSnack
      @MrWolfSnack 3 місяці тому

      woody back when this was made was a slang word for penis. See the Sega game - "Wild Woody". I am sure the swear jargon this was programmed to is dated in and of itself. @@DustyyBoi

    • @intron9
      @intron9 2 місяці тому

      Yes but the replacement word that this version assigns is "notion" , a different one than what people recall.@@DustyyBoi

  • @baslifico
    @baslifico Рік тому

    I've enjoyed both your channels for years. Glad to see the reference

  • @MartynDerg
    @MartynDerg 8 місяців тому

    that's such an adorable piece of tech, and really clever! looked like loads of fun to pick it apart and analyse the data inside

  • @SonOfSofaman
    @SonOfSofaman Рік тому +435

    I got a kick out of Technology Connections' coverage of this device and was thrilled to see it examined further here. What a nostalgic surprise to learn a PIC is at its heart.
    The reverse circuit engineering reminds me of the work Big Clive does on his channel. I wonder if we can get him to puzzle out the purpose of the comparator? Imagine that: my three favorite YT channels all dissecting the same device! A nerd's dream, come true.

    • @ceneblock
      @ceneblock Рік тому +11

      I doubt he'd do it since he's in a PAL region.
      If there was a PAL version, then maybe..

    • @mikedrop4421
      @mikedrop4421 Рік тому +5

      Can I second this?

    • @MrMediator24
      @MrMediator24 Рік тому +9

      @@ceneblock it probably can be imported (or sent by fans) and TVs for a long time work with basically any widespread signal standard

    • @brianlance
      @brianlance Рік тому +3

      I was thinking about Clive while watching this too.

    • @dashxdr
      @dashxdr Рік тому +1

      I couldn't stand Big Clive once he started posting too much about alcohol consumption, the sound of him smacking his lips and such. Keep it in the bar dude

  • @Cookieglue
    @Cookieglue Рік тому +545

    It's so funny seeing someone as chill as ben talk casually as there's such violent profanity in the background 😂

    • @MrOttman001
      @MrOttman001 Рік тому +42

      Also hilarious that a device for censorship device leads to this casual display of profanity.

    • @roseCatcher_
      @roseCatcher_ Рік тому +4

      I am sad because it didn't contain my favorite words.

    • @KaiHenningsen
      @KaiHenningsen Рік тому +27

      "violent profanity" for this stuff ... only Americans.

    • @HandFromCoffin
      @HandFromCoffin Рік тому

      It is.. it's one of those thing you realize words are just data.. it's the intent that is offensive.

    • @president8
      @president8 Рік тому +2

      @@roseCatcher_ what are your fav words?😁😁

  • @johnsullivan2376
    @johnsullivan2376 Рік тому

    Such a good video Eater! I love technology connections and it was super cool to see this video pop up on my feed. Hope you’re doing well! It’s been forever.

  • @TheUnofficialMaker
    @TheUnofficialMaker Рік тому

    You're amazing! Love how you broke down the code with the data sheet.

  • @PerfectionHunter
    @PerfectionHunter Рік тому +488

    Mad props to you for...
    1: Not having a stupid and LOUD intro.
    2: Immediately getting to the point.
    3: Giving all the creds to Technology Connections and rerouting traffic to his channel. People in general despise those who just keep surfing on others work.

    • @stsam63
      @stsam63 Рік тому +14

      This is why Ben Eater is great, definitely check out his other stuff, or if you are curious about his background check out the Ben, Ben, and Blue podcast which is also amazing

    • @petomni
      @petomni Рік тому

      You have found perfection

    • @thisaccountisntreal107
      @thisaccountisntreal107 Рік тому

      He loses a point for cutting towards his hands with that razor blade

    • @markanderson2904
      @markanderson2904 2 місяці тому

      @@thisaccountisntreal107 You can safely cut toward your hand if the thing being cut is soft enough (i.e., the cutting force is low enough) that there is little risk of explosive cut-through.

  • @connorupton4200
    @connorupton4200 29 днів тому

    This video has been one of the best I’ve seen for simply showing how chips work. A+ effort thank you!

  • @pwlegolas3
    @pwlegolas3 День тому

    Love the way you explain and the programming . Thanks Ben Eater !

  • @JohnJones-oy3md
    @JohnJones-oy3md Рік тому +436

    The PIC microcontroller used only has 2K of program memory. Besides doing the word substitution, it also interfaces with the CC decoder IC, on screen display IC, and mutes the audio. All in 2K. That's some neat and tight coding.

    • @somejoe7777
      @somejoe7777 Рік тому +62

      Would love to see a dump of the PIC code that's analyzed. I imagine that certain things like the plural forms of many of the words can be accounted for in the code rather than have to have separate entries in the ROM.

    • @JohnJones-oy3md
      @JohnJones-oy3md Рік тому +26

      @@somejoe7777 You're in luck! Ben Eater just dumped the EEPROM contents in his video 'Hacking a weird TV censoring device'.

    • @mrb5217
      @mrb5217 Рік тому +58

      @@JohnJones-oy3md um....

    • @redbinary
      @redbinary Рік тому +44

      @@mrb5217 "He's standing right behind me, isn't he?"

    • @Smidge204
      @Smidge204 Рік тому +40

      If you think that's tight coding, it might only be because modern code is so bloated. I'm willing to bet the Arduino code featured in this video compiled to over 2K, but could be hand written in AVR assembly in under 200 bytes... programmers these days take GUIs and smart compilers for granted!

  • @JeffGeerling
    @JeffGeerling Рік тому +34

    16:36 - some good r/nocontext material here

    • @Wander4P
      @Wander4P Рік тому

      oh hi Jeff 👋

    • @burnstick1380
      @burnstick1380 Рік тому

      can someone explain?

    • @kaioo1312
      @kaioo1312 Рік тому +1

      I was thinking that you three definitely need to collaborate on something and here you in the comments! Definitely a trio to look out for!

    • @stevenpaul9307
      @stevenpaul9307 Рік тому

      Hi Jeff

  • @jfly609
    @jfly609 5 місяців тому

    I absolutely love watching you code arduinos.
    Every time I do sie I learn a ton of useful tricks and different points of view, which really helps me with my projects.

  • @JC-yy5nf
    @JC-yy5nf 9 місяців тому

    Extremely educational video! Thank you for taking the time making this video

  • @SipuliSankari
    @SipuliSankari Рік тому +721

    Now that you have that eeprom out of the board you can reprogram the word lists so that it will make any perfectly normal text as naughty as possible.
    Then put back the chip and see how well it works and complain how useless the device is. :D

    • @markrussell5587
      @markrussell5587 Рік тому +57

      lol i'd like to try that next time I watch a Studio Ghibli film with my 5-year-old son, who can't quite read yet...

    • @brandonjob2202
      @brandonjob2202 Рік тому +61

      that is a whole nother level of nerd troll and I love it. imagine how shocked some grandma would be back in the early 90's if her guardian only made things worse

    • @prettymuchabandonedaccount9141
      @prettymuchabandonedaccount9141 Рік тому +29

      @@brandonjob2202 *late 90s
      The original version of the TVGuardian was first released in 1998 and was most likely sold well into the early 00s.
      In the early 1990s, the PIC microcontroller line had only just released (in 1993 to be exact)
      Most of the datasheets for the PIC16C622A microcontroller in this specific unit have dates ranging from 1995 to 1998. The manufacture date on the PIC in this unit is between February 7 and 13 of 2000.
      And the EEPROM, despite being covered with some sort of blue paint, I can make out the manufacture of the EEPROM was between November 29 to December 5, 1999. So, this unit was definitely made in January or February 2000.
      Don't judge me, I just like correcting people.
      Bonus: my dad used to have this cable TV hacking device in the late 90s/early 00s generically called the "Quick Board" and used a very similar PIC microcontroller (the PIC16C56-RC/P), which has a manufacture date of August 14 - 20, 1995 (33rd week of 1995). If I still had some of the original cable equipment, I would have been able to test the circuit board based on a chip that's a few days older than Windows 95. Because I can't find anything on Google, I am going to assume that the Quick Board was in limited production (

    • @markrussell5587
      @markrussell5587 Рік тому +7

      Thinking for a second, It would be real easy to do a search and replace for words in the .srt file (the subtitle file)

    • @mattcraig3811
      @mattcraig3811 Рік тому +14

      @@prettymuchabandonedaccount9141 I was just about to comment that the PIC came out in '93 so no way this box is from the 80's. Then you go and drop a full research paper.

  • @sean26057
    @sean26057 Рік тому +19

    Love the stuff Ben!
    "They make sure 'Dick Van Dyke' doesn't turn into 'Jerk Van.... Gay'" - 20:01

  • @superspak
    @superspak Рік тому +2

    This video was amazing. All praise nerd sniping, I've been a TC subscriber for years. He really does answer the questions of history and modern tech in a wholesome humorous way. Don't forget to turn on CC he writes himself "ridiculously smooth jazz playing"

  • @skleptic1621
    @skleptic1621 9 місяців тому

    Absolutely beautiful video! Amazing content and a delight to watch as a computer scientist!

  • @chauvinemmons
    @chauvinemmons Рік тому +711

    I am so envious of how he can just type out a search line of code without any pause just like a little machine gun.

    • @hglbrg
      @hglbrg Рік тому +96

      if he filmed all the hundreds, if not thousands, of times it took to get there, we'd have a pretty long video. You get to enjoy the result of a lot of practice and hard work. Important to remember.

    • @abritabroadinthephilippines
      @abritabroadinthephilippines Рік тому +21

      @@hglbrg I don't think so m8 this guy knows what he's doing.

    • @ivansciacca7810
      @ivansciacca7810 Рік тому +69

      @@abritabroadinthephilippines I think he was referring to the idea that probably he already has done this MANY times for work/hobby already, so he is Experienced and we get to see the result of that experience, not talking about the video being multiple edits.

    • @DoctorX17
      @DoctorX17 Рік тому +30

      It helps that he’s an android, he it only takes a tiny fraction of a second for his positronic brain to retrieve the relevant information

    • @abritabroadinthephilippines
      @abritabroadinthephilippines Рік тому +3

      @@ivansciacca7810 ok my bad.

  • @thejesuschrist
    @thejesuschrist Рік тому +267

    I found this absolutely fascinating!

    • @markgreco1962
      @markgreco1962 Рік тому +44

      Hey, someone has a birthday coming up.

    • @kalinmir
      @kalinmir Рік тому +23

      for pete's sake!

    • @nomenmasi8964
      @nomenmasi8964 Рік тому +16

      Yes, but only in Strict Mode.

    • @shrikedecil
      @shrikedecil Рік тому +3

      ... You were shadowbanned man!

    • @XstonedmonkeyzX
      @XstonedmonkeyzX Рік тому +1

      @@markgreco1962 Bruh, I read this in a voice and tone that made me DIE laughing 🤣🤣🤦...

  • @andreibaciu4477
    @andreibaciu4477 Рік тому +274

    The reverse engineering we never knew we needed :)) great video! This has the potential of a series, no doubt about that

  • @JohnVance
    @JohnVance Рік тому

    I’d watch a lifetime of this type of video. Entertaining and actually kinda inspiring!

  • @kylemulkey9659
    @kylemulkey9659 Рік тому

    I am so glad you mentioned Technology Connections. When I saw the title of this video I immediately thought of that video.

  • @drewpaschal9294
    @drewpaschal9294 Рік тому +294

    In your data dump, near the credits for The Guardian, it showed version 1.05, which is what was printed on the other chip. 👍

  • @TrasherBiner
    @TrasherBiner Рік тому +269

    loved how you explained it thoroughly and easily. It's refreshing to see someone trying to honestly educate being informative without being pretentious or arrogant. Good video man helped me think of a couple of projects for my arduino, thanks.

    • @Repstar00
      @Repstar00 Рік тому +2

      @David Tate Sr you would need a separate drive just to work with the word doc of blacklisted words.

  • @BAFitz
    @BAFitz 5 годин тому

    You've got some sick skills, dude! Great video!

  • @breezyjr
    @breezyjr Рік тому

    This is the first video of yours I’ve seen. I know nothing about computer programming and such, but this was really interesting. I had no idea you could “hack” a chip like this to figure out what’s inside.

  • @Big74Mike2012
    @Big74Mike2012 Рік тому +143

    Not gonna lie.... not once in my life, since I've been doodling with electronics, have I ever opened up a device and been able to identify every IC that was attached to the PCB! Not only that, but even if I could read the imprints and/or figure out what it is, only about 20% of the time am I able to find a datasheet for it. Must be nice!
    Lots of times a Google search of a chip will only lead to one link that directs you to a Chinese website that describes a gadget of some sort that contains the same chip, but those rarely tell you what it is/what it does either!

    • @dass1333
      @dass1333 Рік тому +6

      "Not going to lie" because I lie a lot to most people. For you in this case I will give you some truth.

    • @frinkemon
      @frinkemon Рік тому +8

      Yeah there are lots of weird Chinese clone chips around, plenty of datasheets that need google translate, and a load that just don't seem to have any available data. It's a pain for reverse engineering things but you can often work out what these things are by looking at what it seems to be doing.

  • @Toon444
    @Toon444 Рік тому +92

    I love that your videos go in detail and explain everything that you're doing. There are a lot of videos that would just say "I did some testing and coding and here are the results". I learned a lot from this video!

  • @nottjohn9418
    @nottjohn9418 9 місяців тому

    I literally have no idea what any of that means and didn't expect to see this but I watched it from start to finish. Thanks!

  • @Cymricus
    @Cymricus Рік тому +12

    i love how clever low-level solutions can be. you really see something unique when you don’t have terabytes of storage and gigabytes of bandwidth. i feel good that i was born in the 80s and got an education from the ground up, even though it may not matter in the grand scheme of things

  • @SameAsAnyOtherStranger
    @SameAsAnyOtherStranger Рік тому +35

    I love the range of what Technology Connections considers "tech." From juke box mechanical song selection memory to kerosene hurricane lanterns to the product mentioned on this video. A nice reminder that some things in their day were "cutting edge."

    • @MrBroady02
      @MrBroady02 Рік тому +4

      One of my favorite technologies he covered was good old reflectors.

  • @LukeNAndo
    @LukeNAndo Рік тому +96

    I’m studying engineering and we just learned about interfacing and communicating with PIC microcontrollers, and it was so cool to see you doing so much of the stuff we learned about. I must have written a program very similar to yours about 100 times this semester! 😂

  • @pilkjaer
    @pilkjaer Рік тому

    Thank you so much for an interesting video! I don't know what impressed me most: your engineering skills, your programming skills or your spreadsheet coding skills. It's probably spreadsheets :)

  • @intruder1300
    @intruder1300 4 місяці тому

    Great to watch how you analyse all of this. Really interesting.

  • @MGsyd
    @MGsyd Рік тому +64

    Mate you code at the speed of light.
    You are one of those people who can ACTUALLY CODE and kill everybody else's self-esteem.
    Good job

    • @conkerconk3
      @conkerconk3 Рік тому +5

      He probably already had an idea of how to write the code and recorded him writing it in. Or just experiences enough, because I had to sit and think what "data

    • @JohnSmith-gs4lw
      @JohnSmith-gs4lw Рік тому +6

      Regardless. Still pretty amazing. My head exploded when he started moving the blocks of code around, making subroutines out of it and manipulating the bits and bytes at the speed of light. Yes, I know it was sped up in places. But still.
      And if that wasn’t enough, he then had to shame all of us by just destroying that spreadsheet.
      Massive geek-fu.

    • @nankinink
      @nankinink Рік тому +1

      Sometimes I wonder if his videos are pre-recorded videos with a voice-over. Then for the 3829492th time, "oh its real time". I've been watching him for years and even knowing that everything is real-time, this question still comes up in my mind. It's so funny

    • @NFITC1
      @NFITC1 Рік тому

      This isn't his first time doing this. He's programmed his Arduino plenty of times.

    • @Caffeine_Addict_2020
      @Caffeine_Addict_2020 Рік тому +1

      @@conkerconk3 I dont think so - he explicitly left the part in where he got a compiler error because he coded in the wrong return for his read function, including the classic "oh... Wtf" noise he made. He was doing it in real time, my man's a wizard

  • @Nathriel
    @Nathriel Рік тому +26

    19:56 the comment about the company going out of their way not to censor Dick van Dyke had me cracking up...

  • @cd-zw2tt
    @cd-zw2tt Рік тому

    One of the most rewarding outputs that I've ever seen in Serial Monitor

  • @trevorseals6588
    @trevorseals6588 4 місяці тому

    I can’t believe this course is free on UA-cam. Thank you so much. Can’t wait to learn more

  • @RNMSC
    @RNMSC Рік тому +97

    As to the comparator, it wouldn't surprise me if it's taking the output of the re-write chip and only replacing it in the video blanking window if one of the switches on the back is at the position that requests it. The idea being that if you are watching TV with Little Joe, and Grandpa Joe, if Little Joe can't read, and Grandpa Joe can't hear, he can at least read the original dialog, but little Joe doesn't get either.

    • @Acaykath
      @Acaykath Рік тому +2

      The only viable use for this I can think of is for waiting rooms where there is a TV to distract waiting people, but its on mute to prevent the TV from interfereing with the secretary's work. The chip would keep things mostly G-rated.

  • @GwonkReefkeeping
    @GwonkReefkeeping Рік тому +139

    As an owner of the TV Guardian, and a tech guy, this was a delightful deep dive. I will be rewatching this video several times. Thank you.👍🏾👍🏾👍🏾

    • @williamcampbell9859
      @williamcampbell9859 Рік тому +4

      why do you own this? are you a snowflake?

    • @phoneaccount6907
      @phoneaccount6907 Рік тому +5

      What this device do? It replaces words in running string in tv signal?
      For what it was used?

    • @GwonkReefkeeping
      @GwonkReefkeeping Рік тому +24

      @@phoneaccount6907 It mutes the sound when profanity is used, and places a closed caption replacement statement on the screen without the profanity.

    • @CTimmerman
      @CTimmerman Рік тому +5

      @@GwonkReefkeeping It might be possible to generate real time audio using the same voices now.

    • @settlece
      @settlece Рік тому +6

      poo bum
      bet your TV Guardian did not get that one.
      💌

  • @sgmeta
    @sgmeta 16 днів тому

    Eres muy chingón bro. Me quedé sin palabras viendo todo lo que sabes de código y electrónica. Excelente video

  • @StayCoolKeto
    @StayCoolKeto 6 днів тому

    *wow this was so awesome! Id love to see it running for reel though lol cheers* 👍💪

  • @electronash
    @electronash Рік тому +46

    Somebody probably already mentioned this, but "foone" on Twitter (and others) did a full disassembly of the ROM from the original TV Guardian.
    I believe foone also bought one of the newer devices only two weeks ago, and dumped the ROM from that as well.
    Their twitter threads always make for an interesting read. Lots of nerdy tech details.

    • @rhysbaker2595
      @rhysbaker2595 Рік тому

      "59 seconds ago" wow, I'm here early

    • @a_commenter
      @a_commenter Рік тому +10

      their* twitter threads

    • @SianaGearz
      @SianaGearz Рік тому +2

      Disassembly? Can't see it. I can see the same exact analysis as here from the dictionary dump.

    • @electronash
      @electronash Рік тому +1

      @@SianaGearz I could have *sworn* foone said they'd done a full disassem, or somebody else did.
      You might have to look at the recent tweets to find it.
      It's possible I was mistaken, and they only extracted the dictionary so far.
      Or maybe the disassem just isn't public atm?

  • @M0UAW_IO83
    @M0UAW_IO83 Рік тому +17

    Y'know, I kind of like the idea of reversing the operation of the device...
    Just for Gits n Shiggles of course.

  • @benhb5251
    @benhb5251 2 місяці тому +2

    So, I have no idea about anything that he is saying. But, I can appreciate the absolute nerdness that went into getting to this point. Hats off sir.

  • @michaelcox436
    @michaelcox436 Рік тому

    Suddenly rhere are about ten videos about this device, but this is the interesting one. Thank you.

  • @nhiko999
    @nhiko999 Рік тому +9

    the unidentified bits could be a way to produce a "grammar accurate output" by combining words, adding a, that etc to the replacement. I lost it when you got that 1st 100 bytes :D

  • @logan5689
    @logan5689 Рік тому +34

    This is the coolest thing I’ve seen in awhile! As a student working with electronics it’s super neat to see the reverse engineering, and the fact that things we learn are actually used in the real world haha

    • @squirrelsyrup1921
      @squirrelsyrup1921 Рік тому

      Can confirm I am now using all of those words in day-to-day conversations.

  • @AwesomeGames56
    @AwesomeGames56 8 місяців тому

    And here I was thinking I was a master at spreadsheets with my budget making skills. You are on a whole other level.

  • @donaldklopper
    @donaldklopper Рік тому

    Wow you're so kind with your epic referral to Technology Connections. You're right, of course.

  • @PC_YouTube_Channel
    @PC_YouTube_Channel Рік тому +15

    The most unlikely crossover.
    But also the best crossover.

  • @TwistedForHire
    @TwistedForHire Рік тому +35

    Please do more things like this. I love it. I also love seeing how products were programmed.

  • @kermitinmountain6371
    @kermitinmountain6371 3 місяці тому

    I was choked up with laughter when it mentioned that the word: Tennis is a vulgar. I can't remember a IC chip clamp with wires that can be connected without taking the IC chip out. It would be more easier. However with the reverse engineering from the product decades ago, what you did really blew me away. I had no ideas on how you did it. Good job Sir and thank you!

  • @charliechimp6917
    @charliechimp6917 Рік тому

    The way you explain things promotes motivation to learn these things thanks

  • @PLAYCOREE
    @PLAYCOREE Рік тому +31

    As someone who doesnt find enough motivation to learn programming i really appreciate the pseudo Code explanation to make it understandable for everyone. Really enjoyed that Video!

    • @volvo09
      @volvo09 Рік тому +1

      Yeah, this makes me wish I got into programming as a teen... This man can FLY through the commands!

    • @briandonaldson518
      @briandonaldson518 Рік тому

      @@volvo09 I have a 35 year hole between BASIC/FORTRAN and C (arduino simplified) I'm working to fill. I feel your pain.

  • @4QBUD
    @4QBUD Рік тому +59

    I absolutely LOVE this. I haven't seen anyone do this sort of this since the old Amiga days when people were making stuff to sell at shows. I am very happy that you did this. You brought back some memories of friends I had in the 1980s and the fun every day brought to inquisitive minds.
    You made my day.

  • @Mykyta_Palamarchuk
    @Mykyta_Palamarchuk 4 місяці тому

    This video is just an ultimate brain flex and I love everything about it.
    Thank you, that was beautiful. Never have I subscribed this fast to anyone.

  • @madwilliamflint
    @madwilliamflint 4 місяці тому

    Well that was far more interesting than I would possibly have expected.

  • @MrKyltpzyxm
    @MrKyltpzyxm Рік тому +107

    I wish I could like this video twice.
    This is such a nice, condensed collection of knowledge and skills combined with a practical demonstration of their use.
    I feel like you could develop a whole curriculum just based on this video.
    Not a Masterclass, but an inspiration for designing a class or, more likely, set of classes that result in the ability to perform the tasks in this video.
    (This is all from the perspective of someone who has spent decades watching, listening, and reading about other people doing interesting things, but never learning them myself. I feel worried that anyone with expertise is rolling their eyes at this effusive praise, but this video just clicked for me in a way that made me feel like there is a path that I can still follow to get there too. Sorry for dumping my insecurities out. Unfortunate habit of mine. But the venting helps. Writing long, rambly, meandering UA-cam comments is mostly harmless and feels like free therapy sometimes.)

    • @jessy1982
      @jessy1982 Рік тому +9

      I am finishing off a computer engineering degree and the concepts in here were covered this year, such as what a PIC is, an SPI, a breadboard, reading input/output/clock, timing diagrams, reading datasheets, seeing the data in a table of hex and ascii in the format he showed, microcontrollers, shifting, binary addresses, etc. Seeing it applied so practically is insane to me and I wish this was used as a consistent example throughout our studies to make it more meaningful than the confusing projects we got.

    • @newq
      @newq Рік тому +3

      What's wild is how much he got done using just a damn spreadsheet. I switched careers from information technology and went back to college for a science degree. I barely touched Excel working in IT, but doing science things, we use it constantly. I guess you bring it full circle when you start doing computer science!

    • @ezracramer1370
      @ezracramer1370 Рік тому +1

      true, I was fiddling with arduino for some time based on theoretical practices&examples, this thing totally blew my mind

  • @pretoasted
    @pretoasted Рік тому +7

    So happy to have come across your channel; Way too many channels are very light on the technical stuff.... but as someone very familiar with the technical end due to years in R&D; This is really refreshing and has been very enjoyable to find and watch. Keep up the great work!

  • @cubeflinger
    @cubeflinger 4 місяці тому

    I learnt so much more from this than I ever expected.

  • @pivot9965
    @pivot9965 Рік тому

    Very nice video, i enjoy learning about this TV Guardian.

  • @MrEditor6000
    @MrEditor6000 Рік тому +130

    The fact that a group of people sat in a board room, and had a meeting to
    list 2048 characters of bad words for a product..
    That had to be one of the most Starbucks worthy meetings in history.

    • @warhound7781
      @warhound7781 Рік тому

      List probably originated from some government agency that spent a billion in tax money to compile the bad words...lol

    • @NipapornP
      @NipapornP Рік тому +3

      Why Starbucks?

    • @MrEditor6000
      @MrEditor6000 Рік тому +7

      @@NipapornP Need your coffee to come up with an exhaustive list of swear words

    • @louistournas120
      @louistournas120 8 місяців тому +2

      I don't think there was a Starbucks in the 80s.

    • @MrEditor6000
      @MrEditor6000 8 місяців тому

      @@louistournas120 1971, may not have been wildy popular yet, but there

  • @IsaacPiera
    @IsaacPiera Рік тому +298

    It would be interesting to put the eeprom back and capture how the microchip searches for words. Since they are ordered I'd expect a binary search, but maybe inside the pic ROM there's data that makes it even faster (eg: storing the positions where every character starts, so the binary search requires less readings).

    • @MadScientist267
      @MadScientist267 Рік тому +28

      I'm sure this is just an iterated list down the line until it gets a hit, or falls out of the bottom and just gets passed on. CC isn't high bandwidth, I mean the scheme is done in just a few video lines, and tracking spoken paces, this thing is *still* spending most of its time in a sleep. Just scans that address range upon receiving each word, comparing them whole. That's how I'd do it, not much code, and raw speed isn't necessary. One hint this may be the case is the "dick van" case... It has "dick" stored twice there for one, but also would need another bit to do things like exceptions/qualifiers... Either cutting the sub list further or sacrificing another function.
      Watching it in situ would prove it out of course, but while I'm not privy to the finer details of CC, I'm sure if they used fancier tricks, they'd also be capitalizing on the protocol of the original CC... So that would be a place to look for other clues as to their thought process.

    • @pauly230678
      @pauly230678 Рік тому +18

      They would need to do it in some kind of order, otherwise if you search for "FUCK" before "THE FUCK" you could end up replacing "What the fuck is this?" with "What the wow is this" which makes no grammatical sense. Conversely if you could replace "Why don't you just fuck off?" with "Why don't you just wow off?" rather than "Why don't you just go away?"

    • @rogerthomas368
      @rogerthomas368 Рік тому +5

      With the limited space in the PIC I would guess that that is a simple block table that provides an index into the 256 byte blocks found in the EPROM. So words starting A-C would index to block 0 and so on. As they seem to be on rev 5 of the firmware it would explain why one of the word blocks on the EPROM is full - they have added words and features without completely re-indexing the blocks.

    • @simonblackham4987
      @simonblackham4987 Рік тому +2

      @@Hyxtryx ... it searches the whole table and stores a pointer to the last match ... therefore (for example) Dick van Dyke is found last and overwrites the Dick pointer and skips over Dyke too.
      Reading this again it could be changed into some lines of description in a porno film! 😳

    • @paulromsky9527
      @paulromsky9527 Рік тому +2

      @Isaac Alonso. The PIC microcontroller does not have enough program memory to have a lookup address for each bad word. I think they broke up the words into groups within 256 byte blocks (why we see a lot of NULLs or 00's at the end of each block), then took the first two letters of each word to start a rough search in a specific block in the EEPROM library and then complete the search after finding a 2 character match. This way 'ASS' and, say, 'SHIT' could each be looked up quite quickly, 'AS' starts the search in the first 256 byte bank, and 'SH' starts the search in its appropriate bank (several blocks deeper in EEPROM), thereby skipping the blocks it knows it won't find it.
      My ZX-81 computer did something similar for variables, I can call a variable pretty much anything that I wanted, but only the first two characters are used to look up the variable: 'APPLE' , and 'APE' would not be allowed in that case. The PIC is using the same first two character to select a bank and look for matches based on the flag bytes that follow the dictionary words.

  • @TheNextFiles288
    @TheNextFiles288 Місяць тому

    Videos like this is why i really didnt feel like going to college.
    Didnt have full internet @ gradation 2003,
    But self taught through books, encyclopedias, (1970s edition to 90s)
    So thank you very much, i get knowledge and experience that is vital from people like you.
    And who are not dumb
    Liked and subscribed

  • @TheOneWhoIsTheTwo
    @TheOneWhoIsTheTwo Рік тому +12

    I've been watching through your old videos, particularly the 6502 series. It brings me so much joy to see that you're still making videos. Keep it up, amazing work!

  • @fzigunov
    @fzigunov Рік тому +42

    It would be great to see a follow up on how it reads the closed caption data and sends the mute signal / injects the cleaned up strings.
    This was really cool to see though! You're awesome!

  • @Ange1ofD4rkness
    @Ange1ofD4rkness Рік тому +2

    Thanks to Arduinos I have slowly been teaching myself basic electrical engineering. But seeing stuff like this, I feel I got a lot to improve on (then again that was a good datasheet they offered, a lot easier to read then usually what I try to learn off)